Joseph Nechvatal
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Joseph Nechvatal (1951–) is a post-conceptual digital artist and art theoretician known for creating computer-robotic assisted paintings and computer software animations, often using custom created computer viruses based in cellular automata models.
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[edit] Life and work
Joseph Nechvatal was born in Chicago. He studied Fine Art and Philosophy at Southern Illinois University, Cornell University and Columbia University. From 1979, he exhibited his work in solo art exhibitions in New York City, primarily at Brooke Alexander Gallery and Universal Concepts Unlimited. He has also exhibited regularly in Paris, Cologne, Alalst, Belgium, Lund and Munich and has participated in many museum exhibitions around the world. His palimpsest like graphite drawings and politically charged photo-mechanical artworks well established his career in New York City in the 1980s.
Nechvatal started to use computers to make "paintings" in 1986. From 1991–1993 he was artist-in-residence at the Louis Pasteur Atelier in Arbois France and at the Saline Royale/Ledoux Foundation's computer lab. There he worked on the Computer Virus Project, which was an artistic experiment with computer viruses and computer animation.
In 1999 Nechvatal obtained his Ph.D. in the philosophy of art and new technology concerning virtual reality at Roy Ascott's Centre for Advanced Inquiry in the Interactive Arts (CAiiA), University of Wales College, Newport, UK. There he developed his central conceptual contribution to art theory: the "viractual". For Nechvatal, the viractual consists of that which results from the blending of computational virtual procedures and spaces with ordinary viewable spaces and objects. Such a blending indicates the subsequent emergence of a new topological cognitive-visiual space which he calls "viractuality"; the space of connection betwixt the computed virtual and the uncomputed corporeal world. For Nechvatal, with the increased augmentation of the self and art via micro-electronics feasible today, the actual may co-exist with the virtual and the organic fuse with the computer-robotic.
In 2002 he extended that experimentation into viral artificial life through a collaboration with the programmer Stephane Sikora of music2eye. This work, generally called the Computer Virus Project II, was informed and inspired by the a-life work of John Horton Conway, particularly Conway's Game of Life, and by the general cellular automata work of John von Neumann and by the genetic programming algorithms of John Koza.
In 2005 Nechvatal exhibited a wide array of Computer Virus Project II works (computer-robotic paintings, digital prints, a digital audio installation and two live electronic virus-attack installations) in a solo show called cOntaminatiOns at Le Chateau de Linardie in Senouillac, France. His work has been collected by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, the Moderna Musset in Stockholm and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. His work was also included in Documenta VIII.
In 2006 Nechvatal received a mini-retrospective exhibition entitled Contaminations at the Butler Institute of American Art's Beecher Center. Nechvatal has also contributed to avant-garde digital audio work with his viral symphOny, a collaborative musical symphony created by using his computer virus software at the Institute for Electronic Arts at Alfred University. Nechvatal pursued his viractual ideas as coordinator for the first International CAiiA Research Conference, Consciousness Reframed: Art and Consciousness in the Post-Biological Era (July 1997). This conference looked at new developments in art, science, technology and consciousness. Nechvatal teaches art theories of the viractual at the School of Visual Arts in New York City (SVA) and at Stevens Institute of Technology.
[edit] Critical evaluation
Art historian Donald Kuspit has written in his essay The Matrix of Sensations that Nechvatal's digital painting demonstrates that "there are more possibilities of freedom in digital art — that is, the "mental elements" are "free[r] to enter into various combinations" and thus to be manipulated — than in architecture, painting and sculpture." Frank Popper states in his book From Technological to Virtual Art that Nechvatal's computer virus work is important to the history of art as it has advanced the use of digital technology and artificial intelligence, while defending and preserving the values of formal painting; such as the introspective reflection gained through stillness and the use of natural light.
[edit] External links
- Joseph Nechvatals's website
- music2eye
- The Institute for Electronic Arts
- Viractualism defined at CTheory
- example of red viral attack in the computer fine arts collection
- Interview with Joseph Nechvatal
- Nechvatal's Ph.D. dissertation Immersive Ideals / Critical Distances' : A Study of the Affinity Between Artistic Ideologies Based in Virtual Reality and Previous Immersive Idioms
- Artist Statement on Digital Painting and Artificial Life
[edit] References
- Donald Kuspit The Matrix of Sensations
- Joline Blais and Jon Ippolito, The Edge of Art, Thames & Hudson Ltd, p. 213
- Christiane Paul, Digital Art, Thames & Hudson Ltd, pp. 57-58
- Donald Kuspit Arte Digital y Videoarte, Circulo de Bellas Artes Madrid, pp. 33-35, color illustrations 2,3&4
- Robert C. Morgan Digital Hybrids, Art Press volume #255, pp. 75-76
- Frank Popper, From Technological to Virtual Art (forthcoming from MIT Press)
- Alan Liu, The Laws of Cool, Chicago Press, pp. 331-336 & 485-486
- Robert C. Morgan Voluptuary: An algorithic hermaphornology, Tema Celeste Magazine, volume #93, p. 94
- Bruce Wands, Art of the Digital Age, London: Thames & Hudson, p. 65