Recipient of a 2009 MacArthur "genius grant", Camille Utterback is an internationally acclaimed artist and pioneer in digital and interactive art. Her work ranges from gallery installations to intimate reactive sculptures to architectural scale site-specific works. Utterback's extensive exhibit history includes more than fifty shows on four continents. Her work is in the Whitney Museum of Art and the Thoma Foundation collections, and her “Text Rain” piece, created with Romy Achituv (1999), was the first digital interactive installation acquired by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Utterback is an Associate Professor in the Art & Art History Department and by courtesy in Computer Science at Stanford University. Her work is represented by the Haines Gallery in San Francisco.
Website: Camille Utterback
If you're interested in interactive art, you will not want to miss "The Essence of Interactive Art" on October 10 at Anno Domini in San Jose, with talks by Scott Snibbe, Camille Utterback, and Brian Knep.
Tickets at the door, $0-20, split with artists and venue.
Accessible entrance and restroom on site. Doors open at 7pm, talks start at 7:30.