Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Art exhibit at UC San Diego Art Gallery

ANOMALIA

Erick Meyenberg, Charles Gaines, and Erick Beltrán and Jorge Satorre

February 16 > May 18 2012
Curated by Lucía Sanromán

Opening Reception on Thursday, February 16 > 5:30pm to 8:30pm
with curator and participating artist Charles Gaines and Erick Meyenberg.
Also featuring Modeling Standard—A Guided Tour
by artists Erick Beltrán and Jorge Satorre.


PRESS RELEASE

LA JOLLA, CA--The UC San Diego University Art Gallery (UAG) presents ANOMALIA, curated by Lucía Sanromán. The exhibition features four international contemporary artists whose work engages scientific models of research and representation. Charles Gaines, Erick Meyenberg, Erick Beltrán, and Jorge Satorre employ empirical systems in their practice, including ethnographic data research, cognitive modeling, and systems theory. They merge scientific means of visual encoding, such as diagrams and 2D and 3D data visualization models, with artistic forms of abstract representation derived from Minimalist sculpture and from the paired down aesthetics of Conceptual art. ANOMALIA is organized by distinguished independent curator and former Museum of Contemporary Art Associate Curator, Lucía Sanromán, specifically for the UAG and the UCSD campus.

Prior to the opening, participating artists will provide a preview into their process in two artists talks. On February 8, Mexican artist Erick Meyenberg will give a presentation of his work at 6:30pm in Warren Lecture Hall Room 2001. And on February 15, conceptual artist Charles Gaines will engage in conversation with Dr. Rafael Núñez, Associate Professor in the department of Cognitive Science at UCSD, at 6:30pm in the Warren Lecture Hall Room 2001. Please see Upcoming Talks and Events for further information.

The word ANOMALIA is the Latin root for anomaly and refers to a deviation from the norm. The title references the oppositional intersection between art's subjective and speculative methodologies and the empirical analysis and objective systems of knowledge required of the sciences. The relationship between art and science have been studied and explored in various ways for decades, and recent discussion has specially focused on positioning art practice itself as a form of scientific research. In contrast, ANOMALIA takes a new approach by closely investigating diagrammatic and systematic forms of representation that reveal the constructed nature of both art and science and their mutual investment in the notion of the sublime.

The celebrated conceptual artist and CalArts professor Charles Gaines is featured in the exhibition and his work provides an important theoretical and historical context to the younger artists. The exhibition presents two bodies of work Gaines created in the early 1980s, Landscape: Assorted Trees with Regressions (1981), and Numbers & Trees V (1989). These series investigate the role that systems play in the creation of form and of aesthetic phenomena. Implicit to them is a questioning of the means by which images are read, understood and experienced. By responding to a predetermined numerical structure, rather than to his own subjective desires and needs, the artist proposes that concepts such as beauty and order are learned rather than implicit to the artistic object.

Utilizing LED lights, music and physical space, Erick Meyenberg presents a four-dimensional diagram of the genetic coding of Mexicans, from the Colonial period through today. Using 22 individuals as subjects, Meyenberg calculated the percentage of indigenous, white, and black blood in each individual to create a three-dimensional genetic diagram. By plotting these findings the artist generates an immersive colored light and sound installation that is a symbolic reflection of the socio-economical structure that prevails in Mexico and other countries. The artist has made a new site-conditioned version of Étude taxonomique-comparative entre les Castes de la Nouvelle Espagne et celles du Mexique Contemporain in response to the interior architecture of the UAG.

Shifting to cognitive science and its history, Beltrán and Satorre work collaboratively on a long-term project titled Modeling Standard that takes as a departure point the theory of the "Standard Model" in particle Physics that states that everything is made of twelve fundamental particles. Beltrán and Satorre appropriate this model to create a subjective, multi-narrative, illustrated micro-history that presents key moments and characters from cognitive science, psychoanalysis, art history and literature, including Carlo Ginzburg and Fantomas, among many others. ANOMALIA features new material created in response to a special interview between the artists and renowned UCSD neuroscientist Vilayanur Subramanian Ramachandran, the Director of the Center for Brain and Cognition at UCSD.

ANOMALIA features four contemporary artists whose work is fueled by concepts derived from scientific research and who utilize scientific representations and conventions in their work, but remain embedded in aesthetic phenomenology. The exhibition suggests that by bringing together science with aesthetics, both orders are interrupted. Accordingly, the exhibit both questions scientific positivism and exposes the conceptual underpinnings of aesthetic rapture.

About the Curator:
Lucía Sanromán is an independent curator and writer. From 2006 to 2011, she served as Associate Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, where she most recently curated Jennifer Steinkamp: Madame Curie (2011),Viva La Revolución: A Dialogue With The Urban Landscape (co-curated with Pedro Alonzo in 2010), and Here Not There: San Diego Art Now (2010). She also curated a large-scale site-specific installation by Los Angeles based artist Ruben Ochoa (2010) as well as monographic exhibitions by James Drake, Yvonne Venegas, Brian Ulrich, Hector Zamora, Peter Simensky Joshua Mosley, and Nina Katchadourian among others. Recent projects include Proyecto Coyote for Encuentro Internacional de Medellin 2011 (MDE11), and the edition of the monograph Marcos Ramírez ERRE for the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, Mexico.

Artist Bios:

Charles Gaines (b. 1944, Charleston, South Carolina) is a conceptual artist who investigates systems, cognition and language. Prior to 1990, his work primarily explored the role systems play in the construction of forms and objects. Since 1995, his interests have shifted from numerical systems and progressions to language. Combining photographic images and photo-realistic drawings with text, this more recent interest focuses on the sublime, metaphor, and metonymy. He often appropriates and remixes literary sources with images or music to challenge conventional ideas about the nature of aesthetics and its attachment to affect.
Over the course of his career, Gaines has had over 60 solo exhibitions and several hundred group exhibitions in the United States and Europe. His recent exhibitions include All Of This And Nothing and Now Dig This! Art and Black Los Angeles 1960-1980, both organized by the Hammer Museum; State of Mind/Art from California circa 1970 at the Berkeley Art Museum and Orange County Museum of Art; Under The Big Black Sun: 1974-1981 at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Dance / Draw at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; and Human Nature at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In addition, Gaines has been featured in the Venice Biennale, the Triennale der Photographie, and the Whitney Biennial. His work is included in the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum, New York; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; and the San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, among many others. Gaines received his BA from Jersey City State University and his MFA from the Rochester Institute of Technology. He taught at California State University, Fresno from 1967 to 1989; since 1989 he has been on the faculty of the California Institute of the Arts where he has critically influenced several generations of California artists. He lives and works in Los Angeles.

Erick Beltrán (b. 1974, Mexico City) is a conceptual artist whose work reflects upon the structural mechanisms of systems, particularly those that dictate the production of political, economic, and cultural discourses in contemporary society. His projects often mimic the conceptual model offered by collecting and classificatory institutions such as the museum, the archive, or the library. Creating charts, diagrams, archives, information compilations, and media inserts, Beltrán analyzes the ways in which categorization and structural systems affect how value is assigned to images and objects, groups and individuals.
Beltrán has exhibited widely in both solo and group exhibitions. His recent exhibitions include Modeling Standard with Jorge Satorre at LISTE 16, Basel, Joan Prats Gallery, Barcelona, and Casa Vecina, Mexico City; Itinerarios 2009/2010 at the Botín Foundation, Santander; and Songs of the Swamp at Kunsthalle Exnergasse, Vienna. He has been featured in the Biennale de Lyon, Manifesta, the Trienal Poligráfica de San Juan, SITE Santa Fe, and the Bienal de São Paulo. His work is included in the collections of the Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris; Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid; Colección Jumex, Ecatepec, Mexico; and the Osaka Contemporary Art Center, Osaka, among others. Beltrán received a BA in Visual Arts from the National School of Fine Arts at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Mexico City and has participated in numerous residences around the world, including Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam. He lives and works in Barcelona.

Erick Meyenberg (b. 1980, Mexico City) is an installation and performance artist whose most recent work utilizes ethnographic data research and an empirical methodology to reflect on historic and current sociopolitical/economic structures at play in Mexico and other countries. Frequently creating site-specific works, Meyenberg has been included in solo and group exhibitions in Austria, Canada, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Spain, and the United States. His recent projects include a site-specific sound installation at the Monument for the Mexican Revolution as part of the exhibition Dreams of the Nation: A Year Later, 2011 at the Museo Nacional de Arte, Mexico City. He received a BA in Visual Arts from the National School of Fine Arts at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Mexico City and was a guest student of German artist Rebecca Horn at the Universität der Künste, Berlin. He lives and works in Mexico City and Berlin.

Jorge Satorre (b. 1979, Mexico City) began his creative career as an editorial illustrator; his work, primarily drawing, film and performance-based, is informed by this background. Often purposefully distorting the relations between author/artist, narrative, image and reader/viewer typical to that field, Satorre's projects operate as a suggestion of an event, rather than as accurate documentation. Referencing both historical inquiry and revisionism, as well as personal experience, cinema, absurdist literature, and art history, he exploits the possibilities of drawing as narrative document and as tool for the recovery of memory.
Satorre has been included in many solo and group exhibitions around the world. His recent exhibitions include Modeling Standard with Erick Beltrán at LISTE 16, Basel; the Joan Prats Gallery, Barcelona; and Casa Vecina, Mexico City; Resisting the Present at Museo Amparo, Puebla, Mexico; and In Transit at the Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. He studied Graphic Communication at the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana – Azcapotzalco in Mexico City and has participated in numerous artist residences, including Le Pavillon at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Hangar, Barcelona; and the Artist Residency Program at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin. He lives and works in Mexico City and Barcelona.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Querying the Copernican Question

This symposium in honor of Robert Westman is organized by the Huntington Library, the Southern California Colloquium in the History of Science at UCLA, UCLA Department of History, and USC Early Modern Studies Institute.

Date: April 21, 2012
Time: 10am-5pm
Location: Royce Hall, UCLA, Room 314

Presenters:
Eileen Reeves, Professor of Comparative Literature, Princeton
Rob Iliffe, Professor of Intellectual History and History of Science, Sussex
H. Darrel Rutkin, Visiting Scholar of History, Stanford
Steven Vanden Broecke, Senior Lecturer of History / Visiting Van Dyck Chair, Ghent/UCLA

10:00-10:30: Coffee & Muffins
1:00-1:45: Lunch ($10/person to those who RSVP by April 15)

For RSVPs or questions, contact zoe@history.ucla.edu

Monday, March 19, 2012

Fellowship for UC Students

UCGHI WOMEN’S HEALTH & EMPOWERMENT CENTER OF EXPERTISE
GRADUATE/PROFESSIONAL STUDENT 2012 FELLOWSHIPS

The deadline for this open and general call for proposals is COB on April 15, 2012.

The Center of Expertise in Women's Health & Empowerment believes that advances in women's health globally are impeded by poverty, limited access to educational and economic opportunities, gender bias and discrimination, unjust laws, and insufficient state accountability. These forces intersect to restrict access to vital women's health services and the information that women need to improve their lives. By prioritizing women's health concerns, rights, and empowerment, the COE is uniquely poised to catalyze societal-level changes that will yield sustainable improvements in health and well-being for women on a global scale. We believe that it is vital that we train the next generation of professionals across all disciplines to work collaboratively toward realizing these goals.

Mission: We envision a world in which all women and girls are empowered and healthy. Our mission is to promote justice, equity and scientific advances to reduce gender and health disparities globally. Grounded in human rights principles, our approach is interdisciplinary and transformative. Through innovative research, education and international collaboration, we build and strengthen the capacity of the next generation of leaders in women's health and empowerment. Our core activities focus on assuring safe motherhood, reducing violence against women, improving access to family planning and reproductive technologies, advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights, preventing HIV/AIDS, and reducing environmental threats to women's health.

Student Grant: The Women's Health and Empowerment Center of Expertise (COE), one of three COEs in the University of California Global Health Institute, is calling for fellowship proposals to fund 4-5 student scholarships totaling $20,000. Awards will be granted to successful proposals submitted by UC graduate and professional level students across different disciplines for completing fellowships or conducting research related to women’s health and empowerment in the United States or abroad during summer or fall of 2012.

Grant Purpose and Eligibility: Our goal is to provide funding support for current University of California graduate and professional level students from a diversity of disciplinary backgrounds to collaborate with UC faculty to complete fellowships or conduct exploratory research in the areas of women's health and women’s empowerment. We aim to support research that specifically investigates the intersection and interrelated nature of these two areas. Students with a stronger background in one of the two areas are encouraged to venture into the less familiar area. Doctoral students should not use this fellowship to conduct dissertation research, but could do exploratory research to inform or prepare for later dissertation research. Postdoctoral students and students who already graduated are not eligible.

Applications for funding should not exceed 2 pages and include the following:
University, department, year, discipline-based program, expected date of graduation, and current GPA (unofficial
transcript sufficient).
A description of fellowship and research topic. Please be aware that in order to receive funding, any planned research including human subjects must allocate sufficient time to complete the potentially lengthy IRB process before your departure.
A paragraph describing your motivation and background qualifying you for your project, and how it can help you to work toward your post-UC career objectives.
A paragraph explaining how your research is aligned with the COE’s focus areas of women's health and empowerment.
The \ location where you plan to conduct your research and the host institution (if applicable). Include research objectives, the methodology you will be using, and the dates you will be there. Include a letter of support from the UC faculty member supporting your fellowship, and (if applicable) a letter of support from the host institution (if not available in time for submission please note the date by which you expect to obtain the letter of support).
A budget detailing the amount of funding you need, itemizing the specific expenses (flight, insurance, living expenses etc.). Also include information on any other funding you have received or are applying for.

Please send an electronic copy of the application to Lindsey Zwicker, COE Coordinator, at zwickerl@globalhealth.ucsf.edu.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

CFP: Researching Nanotechnology in the Private Sector

Call for Papers: Special issue of
Nanotechnology Law & Business: Researching
Nanotechnology in the Private Sector.

Guest edited by Dr Noela Invernizzi and Dr Sarah R
Davies, in collaboration with the Center for
Nanotechnology in Society at Arizona State University.




Nanotechnology Law & Business (NLB) is a peer reviewed journal devoted to the legal, business, and policy aspects of small scale technologies. NLB provides valuable expert insights and analysis for all professionals involved in these fast-developing fields. The journal is aimed at a broad and interdisciplinary audience of nanotechnology executives, entrepreneurs, investors, attorneys, regulatory analysts, academics, and policy makers involved in small scale technologies.

An upcoming edition of the journal will be developed in collaboration with the NSF-funded Center for Nanotechnology in Society at Arizona State University (CNS-ASU), and will focus on social, legal, and humanistic research on nanotechnology in the private sector. This special issue will be guest edited by Drs Noela Invernizzi (Federal University of Parana, Brazil) and Sarah R Davies (CNS-ASU) to showcase contemporary research on private sector nanotechnology innovation and development. Submissions may include, but are not limited to, treatments of:

· Innovation, publication, and patent analysis;
· Opinion polls of private sector actors;
· Discussion of and research on workforce issues;
· Contemporary legal frameworks concerning EHS and IP;
· How ethical, legal and societal implications of nanotechnology are dealt with in the private sector;
· Studies of responsible innovation;
· The constitution of emergent corporate self-regulation;
· CSR and nanotechnology;
· Meta-industries: consultancy, legal services, and PR in nano-business.

Submission procedure
Those interested in participating in this special issue should submit papers to Noela Invernizzi (noela@ufpr.br) by 30th April 2012. Articles should be no longer than 8,000 words in length, including references, and should use the Chicago footnotes style of referencing.

Please address any queries to the editors at noela@ufpr.br or sarah.davies@asu.edu.