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Nina Yankowitz is an American visual artist known for her work in new media technology, site specific public works, and installation art. She is a National Endowment for the Arts fellow, and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Award recipient.

Nina Yankowitz
Born
Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
EducationSchool of Visual Arts
Known forNew Media Technology, Feminist, Installation Art, Public Art Works, and Robotic Sculptures
AwardsPollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
Websitewww.ninayankowitz.com

Biography


Yankowitz was born in Newark, NJ, and later lived in South Orange, NJ. She graduated from Columbia High School, and later from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 1969. Yankowitz became a faculty member in the graduate school at UMass Amherst in 1971. During the fall of 1975, Yankowitz was a visiting artist in residence at the Art Institute of Chicago where she first met her future husband, architect Barry Holden. Yankowitz and Holden met again in the 1980s in New York, and married in 1986. They had a son, Ian, in 1989 who is a film and documentary editor.[1] Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster Some Living American Women Artists by Mary Beth Edelson.[2]


Art projects


Yankowitz creates video projections, and/or time-based artwork installations and permanent artworks sited in the public realm. She sometimes works with technology teams to create interactive games. She states:

To enhance individual awareness of societal or environmental conditions I sometimes infuse interactive games and social networking tools into sculptural or virtual elements in my installations. My video projections are created to challenge and stretch commonly accepted definitions of reality.[3]


Criss~Crossing The Divine


Criss~Crossing The Divine is a virtual sanctuary that addresses the ever-expanding religious intolerance fueling ISIS and global wars. Visitors play the team's interactive games while robotic mannequins, representing devotees from each faith, perform a quintessential gesture like actors onstage communicating in her video projecting on a wall. People use interactive wands to curate topics and assign more or less importance to each topic they select while the team's software parses and integrates all the more or less importance assignments the person makes. This process ultimately determines which three hundred color-coded scriptures will appear. The participant is often surprised by what they find after visiting a website to learn from which religions their color-coded scripture results were sourced. Playing the games developed with the global team, acknowledges that as the world turns, our personal perspectives change and accordingly what we search to find within the scriptures shifts. This insures this kind of search can never settle into a permanent groove. The goal is to ask new questions that yield new perspectives from individual quests, ad infinitum and with no amen. It is an updated version of "CROSSINGS"—An interactive installation with games developed with her team during 2007-08. It premiered at the Thessaloniki Biennale[4] in Greece 2009. She conceived and designed the art project as "House of Worships Not Warships" in 2000.[5]

Nina Yankowitz and other original “The Third Woman” team members Martin Rieser, Pia Tikka, Anna Dumitriu, directed original interactive film/game interventions.

“The Third Woman Interactive performance Film/Game” was directed by Nina Yankowitz, based on filmmakers Pia Tikka and Martin Rieser’s “The Third Woman” movie. The Team comprised interactive option texts creators Pia Tikka and Martin Rieser, costume designer Margarita Jahrmann, interactive technologist Rasmus Vuori, data dimensions researcher Mauri Kaipainen, Dance direction collaborator Abby Cassell, Sound artist Dylan Marcus, at the Galapagos Theater Dumbo in Brooklyn N.Y. May 2011. The film is only one element in the complex interactive event. Margarette Jahrmann’s QR code costumes link to Pia Tikka & Martin Rieser “The Third Woman” film clips. “The Algorithmics”, consisting of untrained dancers, performed QR code shape patterns and smartphone instructions onstage. Ultimately they walked into the audience inviting them to scan their QR code costume text options links to vote on the re-arrangement of movie clips based on characters in the film. Audience choices aggregate in real time by Rasmus Vuori computing majority movie option votes and the new version of audience directed “The Third Woman” movie plays on a large video screen at the end of the event.

http://nyartprojects.com/Videos/Third_Woman_FilmGame_NY_Documentary.mp4

Link NY event Video by Martin Rieser

Prior team project is discussed at "Interactive Digital Noir Piece Combines Cinema, Fashion And Gaming". The Creators Project.</ref> May 2012. Prior team versions were created with other original team members: Pia Tikka, Martin Rieser, Anna Dumitri, Barry Roshto, Nita Tandon, Cliona Harmey, and others was shown at the Kunsthalle, Vienna, Greek State Museum of Contemporary Art in Greece.[6][7]


Global Warming Bursting Seams


It is a site-specific installation at the Museumsquartier in Vienna 2012. A digitally mapped window was created over an actual window for people to look through and see her video projections displaying environmental disasters caused by Global warming conditions. Simultaneously, virtual water is seeping through the museum's masonry wall.[8]


ShatterFloodMudHouses


ShatterFloodMudHouses is an HD video animation displaying a portrait exposing, confronting, and forecasting environmental and societal decay. A generic glass house is viewed spinning through myriad cycles inherent in the causal effects of erratic global warming weather, political divisiveness, and the ever-expanding intolerance of differences. Blurring edges between solid and fictive space questions the real-to-reel while shattering expectations of norms into particles of dust. Viewers are lulled and suddenly tossed between calm and brutal disturbances by interventions that shatter and assault psychological, physical and auditory space.[9]


Kiosk.edu


An aluminum and glass and house that reflects quotes from artists, architects, and performers. These were mined from contemporary and art historical excavations. It was designed to inform the public about the personal and conceptual journeys these artists traveled in their creative processes. The house is lighted from within and illuminates the texts. At nighttime, the words seem to hover above the ground. It was installed at the Architectural Institute of America in New York City (2003), The Chicago Art Fair (2005), and the garden of the Guild Hall Art Museum garden in E. Hampton N.Y. during 2005.


CloudHouse


An aluminum and tempered glass house that generates a water vapor cloud changing shape due to the external weather conditions. 6'-4" X 8'-4" x 7'-2". Sag Harbor, New York, 2005[10]


Buried Treasures/Secrets in the Sciences


Buried Treasures/ Secrets in the Sciences is an installation composed with video projections interacting with a science laboratory tableau. Virtual texts, seen spilling from an actual glass tube, float on fictive liquid mercury and tell stories about women in the sciences who are unrecognized for their contributions. 2009, National Academy Museum, New York 2011

With a continued interest in merging elements from the sciences and the arts, an endeavor begun during the 1970s when her Paint Reading Scores linked underlying concepts of synesthesia to artistic practice, she found herself unearthing some women not recognized for their contributions in the sciences during the time of their discoveries.[11]


Truth or Consequences: An Interactive Global Warming Game


Truth or Consequences: An Interactive Global Warming Game with Barry Holden and Martin Rieser. The game enables participants to interact with a video projection or QR code costumes to opine about global warming weather conditions that threaten our universe. Isea2012 attendees used smart phones to scan the codes and choose options, from a menu of possible global warming outcomes, that best reflect their views about the environmental dilemmas we face today. A tally of the most voted upon options that ISEA2012 participants made are available to view at a dedicated website after the conference closing.

The QR code was chosen as a near universal interaction device, enabling audiences to collaborate using mobile phones regardless of platform. Before entering the space, people were invited to download a free QR code scanner to their smart phones. They then encountered a large (9'x16') video projecting a landscape displaying various effects of global warming weather conditions that threaten the habitat. The animated pastiche included: atmospheric, water, geological formations, and flora and fauna found within the New Mexico borders.

Embedded animations peppered the landscape image projection. For example, rocks in the projection slowly cracked and crumbled, revealing molten lava possibly spreading and smothering the earth. Or a peaceful animation of a rippling mountain lake slowly moving abruptly evaporates and changes into a withered, barren lakebed. These animations looped on the wall for 15 seconds until an image froze on a QR Code embedded in an area of the landscape projection. The audience could then scan these live codes with smart phones to review issues and choose responses from a menu of text options presenting possible reactions to global warming threats.

After the presentation, the team wore shirts with printed interactive codes for other ISEA2012 attendees to engage with the game/survey. All were instructed to choose options they believe best reflects their personal views about today's environmental dilemmas.[12]


Exhibition and shows



Select museum exhibitions



Select solo exhibitions



Select public works



Select curatorial projects


Artists include: Baer; Goodell; Gorchov; Kennedy;Leopold; Lewitt; Paine; Potric; Marcaccio Moffett; Rockburne; Stackhouse; Scully; Stella; Westfall; Yoder;
Architects include: Archigram; Hadid; Kennedy & Violich; Ohlhausen & Prentice & Chan; Davis & Brody; Myong; Park; Renzo; Piano; Assympote: Rashi & Cotoure

Awards and honors


Yankowitz received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1979 and in 1981. She was a recipient of the prestigious Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 1997. She was an artist in residence at the American Academy in Rome in 2001. Yankowitz was a curatorial reviewer on a 12-person global committee team for Art Gallery/SIGGRAPH Asia in Hong Kong 2013. She was also the co-curator for the Chicago Art Fair 2005 Public Art Section.


Publications



Select reviews, articles, and catalogues



References


  1. Beckenstein, Joyce (2012). "Nina Yankowitz: Re-Rights/Re-Writes" (PDF). Woman's Art Journal: 20–27.
  2. "Some Living American Women Artists/Last Supper". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  3. Interview with Artist, Jan 22, 2015
  4. "Thessaloniki Biennale 2". thessalonikibiennale.gr.
  5. "Criss~Crossing The Divine". Vimeo. 23 September 2014.
  6. http://www.nyartprojects.com/Videos/Third_Woman_FilmGame_NY_Documentary.mp4 [bare URL AV media file]
  7. "thirdwoman.com".
  8. http://nyartprojects.com/Videos/Global_Warming_NY.mp4 [bare URL AV media file]
  9. "ShatterFloodMudHouses©N_Yankowitz". Vimeo. 10 December 2014.
  10. http://nyartprojects.com/CloudHouseVideo/Cloud_House2.mp4 [bare URL AV media file]
  11. http://nyartprojects.com/Videos/BuriedTreasures_Secrets_In_Science_Stories_Yankowitz.mp4 [bare URL AV media file]
  12. "Truth or Consequences". nyartprojects.com.
  13. "ARTS Display An Artist Info". columbuslibrary.org.
  14. "Art Gallery Committee". siggraph.org.
  15. http://www.nyartprojects.com/content/NinaYankowitzResume.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  16. "Nina Yankowitz: Searching Sacred Texts". easthamptonstar.com.
  17. Beckenstein, Joyce (July 11, 2014). "Playing Word Games With Sacred Texts". The New York Times.
  18. "ART REVIEWS - Fresh Looks at Prints and a Town - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. 13 September 1998.
  19. "ART - THE CASE FOR CRAFTS - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. 8 July 1983.
  20. "Can Women Have 'One-Man' Shows?". The New York Times. 9 January 1972.
  21. "Cheops Would Approve". The New York Times. 5 December 1971.





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