The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Books  |  Comedy  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Best of Boston 2009

Digital language at the PRC

"Syntax," at Boston University's Photographic Resource Center
By EVAN J. GARZA  |  March 11, 2009

090313_syntax_main
Matthew Swarts, Untitled
How important would you say Ansel Adams is to the modern trends of digital art? If your first inclination is to answer, "Not at all," you're probably right. Apart from being silly, the question reminds us how far artists have come in their own artmaking practices — thanks, of course, to modern technology and a few good ideas. But a new exhibit at Boston University's Photographic Resource Center will explore this question pixel by pixel. Opening March 27, "SYNTAX," a group show organized by PRC curator Leslie K. Brown for this year's Cyberarts Festival, offers photographic and new-media works that embrace the concepts and constructs of digital information.

Ansel Adams: New Landscapes, a 23-page book created by Luke Strosnider, is the most literal interpretation of Adams's influence in the show. The artist scanned several of the legendary black-and-white photographer's best-known works and examined the physical landscapes within each to find the shapes of histograms, or statistical bar graphs that display frequency data. It's a play on the Zone System, a programmatic technique created by Ansel Adams and Fred Archer in the early '40s to determine the most favorable film exposure and development. The final images of Strosnider's book strip out Adams's serene settings, leaving crag-like graph structures and mountain-esque peaks (in black and white, of course) composed entirely in Photoshop.

Newton artist Mark Stock's Inside the Bomb is a painterly 3-D rendering of the internal fluid dynamics at the moment of explosion. Brian Piana's works are abstracted versions of Web sites and animations that make reference to Internet use, among them Barack's Twitter, a deconstruction of then-candidate Obama's Twitter site, with simplified logos, a vacant text field, and a color grid. In Patti Ambrogi's pixel-inspired Cover Girls series, a photo of Martha Stewart is composed of 50,000 gingerbread cookie crumbs (the number of bucks she earned from insider trading). And Matthew Swarts's Untitled is a scan of his own dense and concentrated mark making laid over a family photograph.

"I chose to curate a show for this Boston Cyberarts Festival that acknowledges the vast changes our medium has undergone, even in the past decade," Brown explains via e-mail. " 'Syntax' showcases work that visualizes digital information and systems and meditates on the building blocks of digital itself, the pixels and programs."

Other visual art spaces participating in the sixth Boston Cyberarts Festival, April 24–May 10, include the DeCordova Museum, with its current survey of performative video by Ann Carlson and Mary Ellen Strom, and the South Shore Art Center, whose "Losing Ground" spotlights mixed-media photographer and printmaker Dorothy Simpson Krause. For more information about the festival, go to www.bostoncyberarts.org.

"SYNTAX" at Photographic Resource Center at Boston University, 832 Comm Ave, Boston | March 27–May 10 | 617.975.0600 or www.prcboston.org

Related: Lost in translation, Exposures, Dam cute, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Ann Carlson, Ansel Adams, Barack Obama,  More more >
  • Share:
  • RSS feed Rss
  • Email this article to a friend Email
  • Print this article Print
Comments

UNSEXY 2009
Unsexy_09-top-All
Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY EVAN J. GARZA
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DISTANCE MAKES THE HEART GROW FONDER  |  April 22, 2009
    Matthew Day Jackson, Bernadette Devlin, and Zhou Tao at MIT's List Visual Arts Center
  •   KEEPIN' IT REAL . . . SORT OF  |  April 15, 2009
    Virtual reality at the Boston Cyberarts Festival
  •   PUSHING UP DAISIES  |  April 08, 2009
    Beth Galston & Lorey Bonante at Boston Sculptors Gallery, ‘Remembering Albert Alcalay’ at Harvard's Carpenter Center
  •   TO HAVE AND TO HOLD  |  April 01, 2009
    Stephen Prina at Barbara Krakow, 'Architecture of Fragments' at The New Art Center
  •   SARONG, IT'S RIGHT  |  March 24, 2009
    "Revisions: Indian Artists Engaging Tradition" at the Peabody Essex, Meg Brown Payson at Walker Contemporary

 See all articles by: EVAN J. GARZA

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group