Alice Aycock
Ingo Gunther
Helen & Newton Harrison
Brian House
Nathalie Miebach
Inigo Manglano-Ovalle
MIT SENSEable City Lab
Paula Scher
43d
Junichi Oguro
Motoshiro Sunouchi
Fernanda Viegas
Martin Wattenberg
Information as Art. The exhibition explores a wide range of practices that data artists and designers are currently using in their works including interactive dynamic images, sculptures and installations.
DataVis: Information as Art explores a wide range of practices that data artists and designers are currently using in their works including interactive dynamic images, sculptures and installations. Far exceeding the realm of simple animated graphics, these works are elegant forms of visualization that help us to contemplate the aesthetics and meaning of the ever-increasing, omnipresent data we are bombarded by daily.
The exhibition includes works by Alice Aycock; Ingo Günther; Helen & Newton Harrison; Brian House; Nathalie Miebach; Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle courtesy of Christopher Grimes Gallery; MIT SENSEable City Lab; Paula Scher courtesy of Bryce Walkowitz Gallery; 43d: Junichi Oguro & Motoshiro Sunouchi; Fernanda Viégas & Martin Wattenberg.
Major support of this exhibition and its related events are provided by the Beall Family Foundation. The 2012 Family Days are supported in part by the Nicholas Endowment.
Opening Reception (Oct. 4, 6 pm – 9 pm)
Family Day: November 3, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
Beall Center for Art and Technology
Claire Trevor School of the Arts
712 Arts Plaza
University of California, Irvine - Irvine, CA 92697-2775
Gallery Hours
Sunday and Wednesday: 12–5pm
Thursday–Saturday: 12–8pm
Closed Monday and Tuesday