Andrew Norman Wilson (born November 1986) is an artist and filmmaker living in America.[1]
Andrew Norman Wilson | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Education | School of the Art Institute of Chicago |
Notable work | "Virtual Assistance", "Workers Leaving the Googleplex", "ScanOps", "The Unthinkable Bygone", "Ode to Seekers 2012" |
Education
editWilson went to Medfield Senior High School in Medfield, Massachusetts. He received a BS in Television, Radio, and Film from the Newhouse School of Communications at Syracuse University in 2006. Wilson then received an MFA in Sculpture from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2011.[2]
Works
editVirtual Assistance
editWilson's video work Virtual Assistance (2009–11) was made while he was an MFA candidate at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In this piece Wilson documents his use of a personal assistant outsourcing service located in India called GetFriday. The work presents Wilson's relationship with Akhil, his 25-year-old personal assistant. Instead of asking Akhil to complete the tasks he was used to doing for other clients - such as email, finances, and calendar management - Wilson reversed this by asking Akhil to assign him tasks and to come up with ideas for collaborative projects.[3]
Workers Leaving the Googleplex (2011)
editWorkers Leaving the Googleplex is a 2011 video artwork consisting of synchronized footage of two Google locations in Mountain View, California, with a voice-over narrative spoken by Wilson. Its title references the Lumière brothers' Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory.[4] The inspiration for this piece came from Wilson's experience of working at Google in 2007;[5] it presents the class structure of Google shown through Wilson's encounter with the yellow-badge workers, a stratum of workers that privately scan books for Google Book Search.[6][7] Wilson's casual attempts to film and interview the yellow-badge workers were stopped quickly by Google, and it resulted in the termination of his employment at Google.[8] It went viral when it began to be circulated on the Internet in 2011.[9]
ScanOps
editThis project is a photographic series made of Google Books images in which errors in the scanning process are visible.[10] The yellow-badge workers that are the subject of Workers Leaving the Googleplex is the same group of workers responsible for the scanning of books for Google Books images.[11]
Movement Materials and What We Can Do
editMovement Materials and What We Can Do is an extended essay video that presents an overview of Workers Leaving the Googleplex and ScanOps while considering related histories of film and video, photography, and literature. The material basis of analog and digital media, as well as their labor processes, are also addressed.[12]
SONE
editSONE (formerly known as Stock Fantasy Ventures) consists of proposals to investors to fund the creation of commercial image concepts that were then distributed on both the art market and stock media marketplaces such as Getty Images. The images were meant to supply the global market of advertising, business, art, and journalism with imagery that represents widespread feelings of financial uncertainty and discontent.[13] Public Investor Meetings were held at various locations, and the project had its solo gallery debut at Project Native Informant in London in June 2014. The project was brought to an end through a liquidation event at the Museum of Modern Art Warsaw in 2016.
Uncertainty Seminars
edit"Uncertainty Seminars" is both a single channel video and a multi-channel video installation. Framed as a 5 part psychiatric care video series spread across 5 clinical viewing units, each unit positions the viewer's body in particular ways according to each video section's demands. The architecture and objects were made in collaboration with artist Nick Bastis.[14]
Image Employment
editImage Employment is a curatorial project produced with collaborator Aily Nash that debuted at MoMA PS1 in September 2013. It presents recent moving image works that investigate various modes of contemporary production. The selected works illustrate differing approaches to the subject, from observational films that avoid participation in capitalistic image creation, to videos that engage corporate omnipotence by employing its processes, as well as works that complicate these two tendencies.[15]
Artists included in the exhibition: Michael Bell-Smith, Neil Beloufa, Guy Ben-Ner, Ben Thorp Brown, DIS, Harm van den Dorpel, Dan Eisenberg, Kevin Jerome Everson, Harun Farocki, Zachary Formwalt, Mark Leckey, Sharon Lockhart, Auguste and Louis Lumière, Lucy Raven, Ben Rivers, Hito Steyerl, Superflex, Pilvi Takala, Ryan Trecartin, Andrew Norman Wilson
Reality Models
editReality Models is an extended remake of a scene from Peppermint Park, an obscure educational home video series produced in the 1980s by a group of investors seeking to profit off the narrative models that Sesame Street invented for educational children's entertainment.[16]
The Unthinkable Bygone
editThrough the use of Baby Sinclair, a puppet character from Jim Henson’s 1990s animatronic dinosaur sitcom Dinosaurs, The Unthinkable Bygone conflates scientific visualization (3D modeling, simulation, endoscopy, dissection, reflection) and cinematic technique to reconstruct science as a cultural practice.[17]
Ode to Seekers 2012
editOde to Seekers 2012 Ode to Seekers 2012 is an infinite loop video that celebrates the existence and activity of three differently scaled entities - a mosquito, an oil pumpjack, and a syringe - as they seek out an ambiguous resource by piercing a surface that looks like desert salt flats, or skin under a microscope, or potato casserole.[18] Its formal composition is based on a translation of the poetic techniques used in John Keats' Ode on a Grecian Urn.[19]
Kodak
editA semi-biographical fiction inspired by his father's work at one of Kodak's first processing labs, Wilson's speculative gloss on the evolution of photochemical science entwines multiple perspectives and personas. Co-written by James N. Kienitz Wilkins, Kodak imagines a dialogue between a blind, mentally unstable former film technician and George Eastman himself, recordings of whom play out over a procession of photographs, home video footage, vintage Kodak ads, and animations.[20]
Exhibitions
editAndrew Norman Wilson's exhibitions include Dreamlands at the Whitney Museum of American Art (2016), the Gwangju Biennale (2016), the Berlin Biennale (2016), the Bucharest Biennale (2016), and On Sweat, Paper and Porcelain at Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York (2015), Office Space at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco (2015), Art Post Internet at Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2014), Scars of Our Revolution at Yvon Lambert in Paris (2014), and Image Employment at MoMA PS1 in Queens, New York (2013). Solo exhibitions include Fluxia in Milan, Project Native Informant in London, Document in Chicago, threewalls in Chicago, Reed College in Portland, Oregon. His work has screened in Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal, the New York Film Festival, Prospectif Cinema at the Centre Pompidou, #VOICEOVER at the Palais de Tokyo, the San Francisco International Film Festival, and the Images Festival. He has lectured at Oxford University, Harvard University, Universität der Künste Berlin, and CalArts. His work has been featured in Aperture, Art in America, Artforum, BuzzFeed, Camera Austria International, e-flux publications, Frieze, Gizmodo/Gawker, The New Yorker, and Wired.[21]
External links
edit- Official website
- Nick Pinkerton, Andrew Norman Wilson: His Master’s Voice, in: Camera Austria International 145 | 2019
References
edit- ^ https://www.moma.org/artists/131861
- ^ "Sayre Gomez, Andrew Norman Wilson". Art Slant. November 2011. Archived from the original on 2018-11-25. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
- ^ Robert Fallon (January 2011). ""Virtual Assistance" Humanizes Outsourcing". Philadelphia Weekly. Archived from the original on 2013-07-05. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ "Andrew Norman Wilson". ArtForum. July 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Brian Barrett (April 2011). "Google's Secret Class System". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Louis Doulas (May 2012). "Art from Outside the Googlplex: An Interview with Andrew Norman Wilson". Rhizome. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ James H. Miller (October 2011). "Notes from the indie underground: the ATA Film Festival". San Francisco Bay Guardian. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry (April 2011). "At Google, Talking To Coworkers Can Get You Fired". Business Insider. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Reyhan Harmanci (May 2012). "The Hidden Hands Scanning The Worlds Knowledge for Google". Buzz Feed. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Martin Bryant (March 2012). "Google Books scanning errors turned into works of art". The Next Web. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ Laurel Ptak (March 2012). "Andrew Norman Wilson with Laurel Ptak: ScanOps". Aperture. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ "Tensta konsthall".
- ^ "Stock Fantasy Ventures at Palazzo Peckham". DIS Magazine. May 2013. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-11-08. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ MoMA PS1 (September 2013). "Image Employment". MoMA PS1. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Techne Stuttgart". techne-stuttgart.de. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
- ^ "Film Series 2016". January 2016.
- ^ "Distant Words; Dreams and Nightmares".
- ^ "Andrew Norman Wilson on his project for the Gwangju Biennale - artforum.com / 500 words". www.artforum.com. Archived from the original on 2016-08-30.
- ^ "Program 5: Persistent Analogues".
- ^ "The Interdisciplinary Seminar: Andrew Norman Wilson".