Posts tagged EAT Track Feature
Andrew Demirjian

Andrew Demirjian

Andrew Demirjian is an interdisciplinary artist who creates image, sound, and text assemblages.

His work questions the systems, typologies, and languages that construct consciousness and guide behavior. Drawing from conceptual art, experimental music, and computer science, he creates poetry and audiovisual compositions that use constraint systems, chance operations, and remixing. The pieces take the form of interactive installations, generative artworks, and single channel videos.

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E.A.T., EAT Track Feature
Ari Melenciano

Ari Melenciano

Ari Melenciano is an artist, creative technologist and researcher who is passionate about exploring the relationships between various forms of design and the human experience.

Much of her work lies at the intersection of culture, sound, experimental pedagogy, experiential and speculative design. She's a recent graduate and research fellow of NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Graduate Program (ITP) and is now an adjunct professor at both ITP and NYU's Photography and Imaging Department. She is also the founder and producer of New Media Arts, Culture and Technology festival, Afrotectopia.

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E.A.T., EAT Track Feature
Mark Ramos

Mark Ramos

Mark Ramos is a Brooklyn-based new media artist.

Mark is deeply committed to the ethos of open source: the free sharing of information and data + creative uses of technology. His work is engaged with democratizing the worlds of art and technology through community and individual empowerment via the means of technological production. Mark works with the mediums of physical computing (using computers to sense and react to the physical world), software and web programming and digital sculpture to create interactive work that facilitate encounters with our own uncertain digital futures.

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E.A.T., EAT Track Feature
Kinlaw

Kinlaw

Kinlaw is a composer, choreographer and artist focusing on empathic potential and agency developed by performance.

Known for both solo works and performances with as many as two-hundred performers, she studies themes of power, retentive memory, trauma and connection, resisting corporeal jurisdiction and the ways sociopolitics infringe upon our bodies. Her work has been featured throughout New York City in institutions like MoMA, MoMA PS1, Pioneer Works, Mana Contemporary, National Sawdust and Knockdown Center as well as throughout Europe. Kinlaw has been written about in The New York Times, Art In America, Huffington Post, Art Forum and Pitchfork, amongst others.

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E.A.T., EAT Track Feature