|
CELL PHONE: Art and the Mobile Phone
January 21 - April 22, 2007
Check out the photos from our Opening
Reception.
See programming and events for Cell Phone: Art and the Mobile Phone.

Cell Phone: Art and the Mobile Phone explores
some of the groundbreaking works that are being created
by artists today using cell phone technologies. These
works engage such features and technologies as camera
phones, video phones, global positioning systems, Bluetooth
technology, ring tone sounds, and messaging. Artistic
interest in mobile phone technology lies not only in
producing artworks for individual handheld devices,
but in the potential of mobile phone technologies to
create works that can be performative and participatory.
Often created without the traditional systems of art
world distribution or exhibition in mind, these works
look beyond the walls of a gallery and move art into
the dynamic realm of mobility, interaction, and global
connectivity.

Cell Phone features an international group of
over 30 artists and artist collectives representing
the range of artworks being created with and for a mobile
phone device. Some of the works in Cell Phone take the
form of a sculptural object, like Beatrice Valentine
Amrheins Videos Lustre (2006) which
features dozens of cell phones hanging from the ceiling
like a chandelier, each running a short film on the
cell phones screen. Other works, like TXTual
Healing (2002-2007) by Paul Notzold, or cell:block
(2007) by the artist collective URBANtells, invite
the audience to contribute content to a work through
text messages or photos sent from their cell phones.
Another category of works in the exhibition include
those that involve downloading a program, a video, or
an image to your mobile device. Angie Wallers
clip.fm, for example, expands the communicative
possibilities of cell phones through a series of narrative
animations that can be downloaded and sent to friends
instead of a text message. Other works like Mark
Shepards Tactical Sound Garden (2004-2006)
or Blast Theorys Uncle Roy All Around
You (2003) introduce software to a mobile device
that allows audience members to participate with others
in an interactive performance. Making a call from a
cell phone will connect visitors with yet another group
of works in the exhibition. Talking on a cell phone
while walking through Informationlabs room-sized
installation Cell Phone Disco (2006), for example,
will make visible the aura of an active cell phones
signal by creating a trace of blinking lights on the
gallery walls. In other works, a phone number will be
given to access pieces such as Steve Bradleys
Call & Response: HydroSistrum which will
invite visitors to dial a number to listen to data related
to the ecology of the Chesapeake Bay, including information
about water quality, currents, and temperature.

Cell Phone: Art and the Mobile Phone is accompanied
by an audio guided tour accessible via cell phone. Cell
Phone is organized by the Contemporary Museum and
curated by Contemporary Museum director, Irene Hofmann.
| Cell Phone: Art and Mobile Phone
is made possible by: |
 |
|
|
| Major sponsorship support provided by: |

|
and
|
|
Participating artists (partial list):
Beatrice
Valentine Amrhein (Paris)
Blast Theory
(London)
Steve
Bradley (Baltimore)
Family Filter
Jonah Brucker-Cohen (New York), Tim Redfren (Dublin),
Duncan Murphy (Dublin)
Informationlab
Ursula Lavrencic and Auke Touwslager (Amsterdam)
Golan Levin (Pittsburgh)
Paul Notzold
(Brooklyn, NY)
Mark
Shepard (New York)
URBANtells
Steve Bradley, James Rouvelle, and Joe Rensel (Baltimore)
Angie Waller
(New York)
|