Boston Cyberarts Festival Explained

Boston Cyberarts Festival
Location:Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Founded:1999
Awardsreceived:Commonwealth Award (Massachusetts Cultural Council)
Host:Boston Cyberarts Inc
Website:http://www.bostoncyberarts.com

The Boston Cyberarts Festival used to be the largest festival of digital art,[1] performance and film created using new technology in the USA. Around 22,000 people attended the festival in 2007 where they witnessed the work of over 200 artists from all over the world.

The festival took place once every two years in Boston, Massachusetts, USA usually spanning the last week of April and the first week in May. The festival was first held on 1 – 15 May 1999, and the last festival took place on 22 April – 8 May 2011. The Festivals were organized by Boston Cyberarts Inc, a non-profit arts organization.

, the director of Cyberarts is George Fifield, who was one of the original cofounders of the organization. Boston Cyberarts, Inc. continues to exist as a non-profit arts organization, but has redirected its energies to promoting the arts and technology year-round, rather than biennially. The most visible continuing effort is the Boston Cyberarts Gallery, which used to be the Axiom Center for New and Experimental Media. The gallery was and is located in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, in the Green Street station building on the MBTA Orange Line rapid transit line.

The online presence of the past Boston Cyberarts Festivals, including online exhibits, is archived and still accessible free of charge.[2]

Location

The festival was located in Boston, Massachusetts. The festival usually featured a central headquarters where visitors could get information about the events and also attend the opening night party. Massachusetts had arguably the densest population of digital artists in the US, making Boston the high-technology cultural center of the country. The festival's events were held in Boston's art galleries, museums, universities, and public spaces. For those unable to attend the festival physically, there were virtual festival events held on the internet.

First event

Around 22,000 people attended the Festival in 2007 where they witnessed the work of over 200 artists from all over the world. Events and exhibitions took place at 81 Festival events organized by over 60 arts organizations in Boston. The events featured:

Boston Cyberarts Inc also presented its own exhibitions and performances during the Festival. For example, at the Computer Museum they presented the exhibition 'Mind into Matter', co-curated by Festival director George Fifield and Francine Koslow Miller. This was the first international survey of digital sculpture. Over 100 events took place organized by 60 cultural and education institutions, including museum and gallery exhibitions and visual arts programming.

Art

The art work at the festival has been produced using computers; often alongside more traditional mediums such as paint, photography, film, musical instruments or dance and performance.[3]

The festival celebrates international art and the wealth of artistic talent in its home region of Massachusetts, United States.

Awards

In 2007, the Boston Cyberarts Festival received the following awards:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Creative Economy. Massachusetts Cultural Council 2009. 2009-02-11. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090208222932/http://www.massculturalcouncil.org/conference/bios_07.html. 8 February 2009.
  2. Web site: Boston Cyberarts, Inc.. Boston Cyberarts Festival Archive. Boston Cyberarts. Boston Cyberarts, Inc.. 8 March 2013. dead. https://archive.today/20130414083550/http://bostoncyberarts.org/boston-cyberarts-festival-archive/. 14 April 2013.
  3. Web site: Browse Artists & Artworks descriptions. https://web.archive.org/web/20110708084956/http://www.bostoncyberarts.com/apropos/apropos_artworks.php?hash=5210782f91b5057afb873947d330abe2. dead. 8 July 2011. 2009-02-21.