|
Scott
Snibbe,
who holds Bachelors degrees in Computer
Science and Fine Art, and a Masters in
Computer Science from Brown
University, creates
electronic media installations that directly engage
the body of the viewer in a reactive system. His
work has been shown internationally at venues
including the Whitney Museum of American Arts
Artport (New York),
Eyebeam (New York),
and The Kitchen (New York);
the InterCommunications
Center (Tokyo);
Ars Electronica (Austria);
The Institute of Contemporary Art (London);
and the Yerba
Buena Center
for the Arts (San Francisco).
He has been awarded a variety of international
prizes, including the Prix Ars Electronica, and a
Rockefeller New Media Fellowship. Snibbe has taught
media art and experimental film at Brown
University, the San
Francisco Art Institute, the Rhode Island School of
Design and UC Berkeley. He has held research
positions at Adobe Systems and Interval Research.
His works are designed to have specific social
effects: to create a sense of interdependence, to
promote friendly interaction among strangers, and
to increase viewers concentration. Roberto
Simanowski talked with him about
kids, parents, Buddhism, benches and walls.
|