Mary Flanagan

Last updated
Mary Flanagan
Mary Flanagan at work.png
Flanagan at work
NationalityAmerican
Known forSherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor in Digital Humanities, Dartmouth College professor, Director of the Tiltfactor Lab, CEO and lead designer at Resonym.

Mary Flanagan is an American artist, author, educator, and designer. [1] [2] She pioneered the field of game research with her ideas on critical play and has written several books. She is the founding director of the research laboratory and design studio Tiltfactor Lab and the CEO of the board game company Resonym. Flanagan's work as an artist has been shown around the world and won the Award of Distinction at Prix Ars Electronica in 2018. [3]

Contents

Education

Flanagan graduated with a BA from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, earned MFA and MA degrees from the University of Iowa, and achieved her doctorate from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, UK. She studied film for her undergraduate and masters work while her PhD was in Computational Media focusing on game design.[ citation needed ]

Academic career

She is the inaugural chair holder of the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professorship in Digital Humanities at Dartmouth College, where she has served since 2008.

Flanagan has been awarded:

She has been a scholar at:

She has served on the faculty of:

Flanagan has given keynotes to groups ranging from the Association of Professional Futurists [13] to Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), from Philosophy of Computer Games to Games Learning and Society, [14] and from the experimental STRP Festival to Women in Games. Flanagan was also a 2018 Cultural leader at the World Economic Forum [15] and an Invited Participant at the World Government Summit.

Flanagan kicking off the event at the 2009 Come Out and Play Festival. Mary Flanagan starts us off.jpg
Flanagan kicking off the event at the 2009 Come Out and Play Festival.

Resonym

Flanagan is the CEO and creative director of Resonym. Founded in 2012, Resonym publishes original games and goods for social innovation. Resonym develops board games, card games, and digital games. Many of the games Resonym has published have been researched at Flanagan's research studio, Tiltfactor. Resonym has designed and published award-winning party games like Buffalo: The Name Dropping Game and Awkward Moment, as well as the strategy games Monarch and VISITOR in Blackwood Grove. [16] Buffalo was developed using Tiltfactor's research and aims to break down gender and racial stereotypes. [17]

Work

Her art has been exhibited around the world. Within the field of culture and technology, she developed a theory of Play Culture. [18]

Flanagan's artwork deals primarily with how the design and use of technology can reveal insights into society. Other work is concerned with the representation of women in cyberculture. Her artwork has exhibited internationally at The Whitney Museum of American Art, SIGGRAPH, Ars Electronica, The Guggenheim, Turbulence.org and others. [19]

Selected works

[Grace: AI]

Grace: AI (2019) is a Feminist AI system trained to "see" by processing a dataset of tens of thousands of paintings and drawings by women artists. In Grace's origin story she first examines thousands of images of Mary Shelley's monster, Frankenstein, and then applies her learning of a female art history to the creation of portraits of her "father figure". [20] The work first premiered in the exhibition "A Question of Intelligence" at the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, Parsons, New York, Feb-April 2020.

[help me know the truth]

help me know the truth (2016) is an interactive exhibit based on the idea that everyone is constantly judging others at the same time that they are aware others are judging them. Participants would take their own pictures that would then be used in the exhibit. They would be given two slightly altered images to choose from in order to match a given word. The work used computational neuroscience to show how beliefs people have about facial features can be related to culture and identity. [21] The work received the Award of Distinction at the 2018 Prix Ars Electronica.

[borders]

borders is a 2009 video series documenting psychogeographic walks in virtual spaces around “virtual” historical sites. They are shown on monitors and projected in gallery space. The work explores borders geographically, politically, and conceptually. The walks in [borders] are beautiful, and, as though we were transported directly into Thoreau's walking shoes, one can "glimpse Elysium,” but only as Thoreau might have: Whilst walking along, surveying the boundaries and divisions. In following virtual property lines, the walker becomes stuck in stones, sent underwater, and literally teeters at the edge of the world, thus exposing the algorithmic nature of the rendering of landscape and the invisible disruptions in a seamless world. [borders] has since been exhibited in several locations including the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, Portugal in October 2019, the Museum of Fine Arts in Cologne from 2017 to 2018, and the Electronic Language International Festival in 2014.

[xyz]

xyz (2009) combined Flanagan's interests in virtual environments and interactive writing, allows participants to build poetry in 2-dimensional game worlds. Player-writers navigate three different worlds, each representing one axis and containing 1/3 of a larger text. As the players construct stanzas, they are projected onto a central screen combining the three disparate texts into one new work.

[collection]

[collection] uses downloadable software to scan users' hard drives, glean random files, and store the collected information on a shared server. The combined data is then displayed, creating what has been described as a virtual networked collective unconscious. It has been featured in Sydney, Barcelona, and in the 2002 Whitney Biennial. [22]

[domestic]

[domestic] (2003) is a modification of the first-person shooter game Unreal Tournament 2003. Combining elements of digital narrative and video game play, Flanagan uses the games engine to create a home-like environment that conveys images relating to a significant childhood memory of hers. On her way home from church in her hometown in rural Wisconsin, she noticed smoke coming from her family's house. She frantically raced toward it, knowing her father was inside. The work suggests internal turmoil rather than outward aggression by replacing physical battles with psychological ones. [23] The work is featured in the book New Media Art. [24]

[giantJoystick]

[[File:Kati London, the Giant Joystick and I.jpg|thumb|236x236px|Mary Flanagan's [giantJoystick] being used collaboratively by two people to play an Atari game.]] [giantJoystick] (2006) is a ten-foot-tall working joystick designed for collaborative play of Atari 2600 games. Among other exhibitions, it has appeared in the 2007 Feedback show at the Laboral Art Center, Spain [25] and at the Beall Center in Los Angeles. Giant Joystick is now part of the permanent collection at ZKM. [26]

[the mirror book]

In 2018, Flanagan exhibited what she refers to as a "computational collaboration," [27] which was an installation piece done with computer software and a projector. The software, developed by Flanagan herself, was able to combine the poems of French surrealist artist Dora Maar with her own. Maar's poems would start on the left and Flanagan's on the right, then the software would merge the poems together to create new ones with different meanings than they had originally. Flanagan describes this process as a way to collaborate with the late Dora Maar.

Writing

Based on her PhD dissertation, the book Critical Play: Radical Game Design (MIT Press, 2009) examines how artists and activists throughout history have used games as instruments for social critique. [28] [29] re:skin (MIT Press, 2007), a book Flanagan edited With Austin Booth, is collection of fiction and theory exploring technology, interfaces, and the body. [30] Similitudini. Simboli. Simulacri (SIMilarities, Symbols, Simulacra) (Edizioni Unicopli, 2003), a book she co-authored with Matteo Bittanti, investigates the fan culture of The Sims. Finally, Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture(MIT Press, 2002) [31] was also co-edited with Austin Booth and addresses gender issues in both fictional and real-life cyber-culture. [32] In 2003, Reload won the Susan Koppelman Award given by the Joint Women's Caucus of Popular Culture/American Culture. [33]

Flanagan has also contributed to a number of academic journals, anthologies, and conference proceedings. Values at Play in Digital Games (MIT Press, 2014) with Helen Nissenbaum features a collection of guest writers including Frank Lantz, Celia Pearce, Tracy Fullerton, and more. Recent research explores the psychology of change in games.

Flanagan is also a poet, with poems published in journals such as The Pinch, Barrow Street, and The Iowa Review. [34] In 2017, Flanagan published her poetry book, Ghost Sentence.

Related Research Articles

Software art is a work of art where the creation of software, or concepts from software, play an important role; for example software applications which were created by artists and which were intended as artworks. As an artistic discipline software art has attained growing attention since the late 1990s. It is closely related to Internet art since it often relies on the Internet, most notably the World Wide Web, for dissemination and critical discussion of the works. Art festivals such as FILE Electronic Language International Festival, Transmediale (Berlin), Prix Ars Electronica (Linz) and readme have devoted considerable attention to the medium and through this have helped to bring software art to a wider audience of theorists and academics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manfred Mohr</span> German artist (b.1938)

Manfred Mohr is a German artist considered to be a pioneer in the field of digital art. He has lived and worked in New York since 1981.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Weibel</span> Austrian artist (1944–2023)

Peter Weibel was an Austrian post-conceptual artist, curator, and new media theoretician. He started out in 1964 as a visual poet, then later moved from the page to the screen within the sense of post-structuralist methodology. His work includes virtual reality and other digital art forms. From 1999 he was the director of the ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rebecca Allen (artist)</span> American digital artist

Rebecca Allen is an internationally recognized digital artist inspired by the aesthetics of motion, the study of perception and behavior and the potential of advanced technology. Her artwork, which spans four decades and takes the form of experimental video, large-scale performances, live simulations and virtual and augmented reality art installations, addresses issues of gender, identity and what it means to be human as technology redefines our sense of reality.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Casey Reas</span>

Casey Edwin Barker Reas, also known as C. E. B. Reas or Casey Reas, is an American artist whose conceptual, procedural and minimal artworks explore ideas through the contemporary lens of software. Reas is perhaps best known for having created, with Ben Fry, the Processing programming language.

Jeffrey Shaw is a visual artist known for being a leading figure in new media art. In a prolific career of widely exhibited and critically acclaimed work, he has pioneered the creative use of digital media technologies in the fields of expanded cinema, interactive art, virtual, augmented and mixed reality, immersive visualization environments, navigable cinematic systems and interactive narrative. Shaw was co-designer of Algie the inflatable pig, which was photographed above Battersea Power Station for the 1977 Pink Floyd album, Animals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Internet art</span> Form of art distributed on the Internet

Internet art is a form of new media art distributed via the Internet. This form of art circumvents the traditional dominance of the physical gallery and museum system. In many cases, the viewer is drawn into some kind of interaction with the work of art. Artists working in this manner are sometimes referred to as net artists.

Tom Corby and Gavin Baily (1970) are two London based artists who work collaboratively using public domain data, climate models, satellite imagery and the Internet. Recent work has focused on climate change and its relationship to technology and has involved collaborations with scientists working at the British Antarctic Survey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marie Sester</span> French-American artist

Marie Sester is a French-American decades-long artist, and current PhD student studying the nature of consciousness. Her artwork involves cross-disciplinary practices and experimental systems in Interactive Art using tracking technologies, light, audio, video, and biofeedback, focusing on social awareness and the responsibility of personal commitments. Her PhD work is in Integral and Transpersonal Psychology focusing on connectedness, expansiveness, and presence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tamiko Thiel</span> American artist (born 1957)

Tamiko Thiel is an American artist, known for her digital art. Her work often explores "the interplay of place, space, the body and cultural identity," and uses augmented reality (AR) as her platform. Thiel is based in Munich, Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sputniko!</span> Japanese artist and designer

Hiromi Marissa Ozaki, better known by her pseudonym Sputniko!, is a Japanese artist, designer and entrepreneur. She specializes in the field of speculative and critical design. She is known for her films and multimedia installation works inspired by emerging technologies’ possible impact on society and values – with a focus on gender issues.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sissel Tolaas</span> Norwegian artist and researcher (born 1961)

Sissel Tolaas is a Norwegian artist and researcher known for her work with smell.

Tina La Porta is a Miami-based digital artist who "focuses on issues surrounding identity in the virtual space". She was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1967. Her early work could be characterized as net:art or internet art. In 2001 she collaborated with Sharon Lehner on My Womb the Mosh Pit, an artistic representation of Peggy Phelan's Unmarked. La Porta is known for political and feminist art that explores gender, bodies and media such as the 2003 installation Total Screen which consists of enlarged Polaroid photographs of veiled men and women in TV news coverage after the events of 9/11. Later work explores mental illness and pharmaceuticals. In 2012 she presented Medicine Ball at the Robert Fontaine Gallery as part of the "Warhol is Over?" exhibition; this followed a 2011 presentation of All the Pills in My House, also at Fontaine's gallery. In 2015 she participated in the 40-person Annual Interest exhibition at the Young at Art Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Bielický</span>

Michael Bielicky is a Czech-German artist working in new media, video art, and installations. He is a professor in the department of digital media and post-digital narratives at the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design. In 1989, Bielicky's artwork Menora/Inventur became his first work to be acquired by the ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe by its founder Heinrich Klotz.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mauro Martino</span> Italian artist, designer and researcher

Mauro Martino is an Italian artist, designer and researcher. He is the founder and director of the Visual Artificial Intelligence Lab at IBM Research, and Professor of Practice at Northeastern University.

Monika Fleischmann is a German research artist, digital media scientist, and curator of new media art working in art, science, and technology. Since the mid-1980s she has been working collaboratively with the architect Wolfgang Strauss. As part of their research in New Media Art, Architecture, Interface Design and Art Theory, they focus on the concept of Mixed Reality, which connects the physical with the virtual world.

Prema Murthy is an American, multi-disciplinary artist based in New York. Employing aesthetics, gesture, geometry and algorithmic processes, Murthy's work explores the boundaries between embodiment and abstraction, while engaging in issues of culture and politics. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at MoMA PS1, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, the Reina Sofia Museum, the Generali Foundation in Vienna, and the India Habitat Center-New Delhi.

Maja Smrekar is a Slovenian intermedia artist. In 2005 she graduated at the Department for Sculpture of Fine Art and Design Academy in Ljubljana. She also holds Master's degree in Video and New Media that she obtained at the same institution. She has exhibited in numerous institutions across the world. In 2017 she received the Golden Nica award at the Ars Electronica festival for her K-9_topology series. In this opus, which consist of four projects she addressed the topics of parallel evolution of human and dog. From 2008 she is a featured artist and production partner of Kapelica Gallery in Ljubljana.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jake Elwes</span> British media artist

Jake Elwes is a British media artist, hacker, radical faerie, neuroqueer, and researcher. Their practice is the exploration of artificial intelligence (AI), queer theory and technical biases. They are known for using AI to create art in mediums such as video, performance and installation. Their work on queering technology addresses issues caused by the normative biases of artificial intelligence.

Kim Albrecht is a German media artist, information designer, and scholar known for his critical and investigative data visualizations. He is a professor at the Filmuniversität Babelsberg Konrad Wolf, principle of metaLAB (at) Harvard, and co-founder of metaLAB (at) Berlin. Albrecht earned his Ph.D. from the University of Potsdam and is a faculty associate of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society.

References

  1. "Biography of Mary Flanagan." Cyborg Anthropology. Cyborg Anthropology, 5 Nov. 2011. Web.
  2. "Mary Flanagan." Board Game Geek. BoardGameGeek, LLC, n.d. Web. 02 Apr. 2015.
  3. "The Winners of the 2018 Prix Ars Electronica". Ars Electronica Press. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  4. "Distinguished Scholars | DiGRA".
  5. "Announcing the 2018 Arts Writing Award Recipients". Carl & Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation. 2018-06-14. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  6. "Honorary Degree Recipients | Illinois Institute of Technology". 2016-08-07. Archived from the original on 2016-08-07. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  7. "Games for Change Festival Recap". Games For Change. 2016-07-05. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  8. "Getty Research Institute Announces 2016/2017 Scholars In Residence and Artist In Residence Fiona Tan | News from the Getty". news.getty.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  9. University, Office of Web Communications, Cornell. ""Skin Practice": Society for the Humanities Annual Fellows' Workshop". Cornell. Retrieved 2019-03-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. "Mary Flanagan will be Distinguished Visiting Fellow in 2014-15". 2017-09-07. Archived from the original on 2017-09-07. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  11. "People- Salzburg Global Seminar". salzburgglobal.org. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  12. "Professor Mary Flanagan Participates in White House Consortium | Dartmouth News". news.dartmouth.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  13. "APF Orlando Gathering: Mindfulness in a Future of Simulations and Games". Association of Professional Futurists. 2013-06-10. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  14. "CSCW 2014 - Program | Keynote". cscw.acm.org. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  15. "Arts and Culture at Davos 2018". widgets.weforum.org. Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  16. "Resonym | About" . Retrieved 2019-03-15.
  17. Wilson, Mark (2015-10-28). "A Simple Card Game Designed To Rewrite Gender And Racial Stereotypes". Fast Company. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  18. "Mary Flanagan and Her Thesis, 'Play Culture.'" DocSMARTs: PhD in the SMARTlab Digital Media Institute. University of East London, n.d. Web. 31 Mar. 2015.
  19. "Mary Flanagan & Andrew Gerngross". FILE. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  20. “[Grace: AI].” MARY FLANAGAN, https://studio.maryflanagan.com/grace-ai/.
  21. “[Help Me Know the Truth].” MARY FLANAGAN, maryflanagan.com/work/help-me-know-the-truth/.
  22. "[collection] | MARY FLANAGAN". maryflanagan.com. 5 July 2002. Retrieved 2016-02-26.
  23. Tribe, Mark; Jana, Reena (2006). New Media Art. Taschen. ISBN   3822830410.
  24. "Mary Flanagan, 'domestic.'" The Brown University Wiki Service. Brown University, n.d. Web. 31 Mar. 2014.
  25. "Feedback in Spain." Post.thing.net. The Thing, Inc., n.d. Web. 31 Mar. 2015.
  26. "The ZKM | ZKM". zkm.de. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  27. “[The Mirror Book].” MARY FLANAGAN, maryflanagan.com/work/the-mirror-book/.
  28. "Critical Play - the MIT Press". mitpress.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 27 January 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  29. Mosher, Michael R. "Review of 'Critical Play: Radical Game Design.'" Archived 2015-04-19 at the Wayback Machine Leonardo Reviews Online. Leonardo, 4 Jan. 2010. Web. 31 Mar. 2015.
  30. "Re:skin | the MIT Press".
  31. "Reload - the MIT Press". mitpress.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 18 August 2005. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  32. Mosher, Michael R. "Review of 'Reload: Rethinking Women + Cyberculture.'" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Leonardo Reviews Online. Leonardo, 4 Jan. 2010. Web. 31 Mar. 2015.
  33. "Reload". The MIT Press. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  34. "The Iowa Review: Award Announcements". iowareview.uiowa.edu. Archived from the original on 21 July 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2022.