Camera, monitor, two computers, and computer vision software
Location
Whitney Museum in New York, New York
Amy Alexander is an artist and researcher working in audio/visual performance, interactive art and software art, under a number of pseudonyms including VJ Übergeek[1] and Cue P. Doll.[2] She is a professor at the Department of Visual Arts at the University of California, San Diego.[3]
Alexander's first widely exhibited new media work was the net art project, The Multi-Cultural Recycler (1996/7), which was nominated for a Webby Award in 1999.[8] She then developed the plagiarist.org website, which was known for its humorous projects related to Internet culture.[9] Since 2012, her work has been in video installation and visual performance, most notably SVEN, Discotrope: The Secret Nightlife of Solar Cells with Annina Ruest and CyberSpaceLand. She has also written texts on historical and contemporary audiovisual performance, including a chapter in the volume of the book See This Sound - Audiology, called Compendium.[10]
Alexander attended Rowan University from 1988–1991 and received her BA in Communications: Radio/TV/Film. She then attended the California Institute of the Arts from 1993 to 1996, and received her MFA in Film/Video and New Media.[3]
Amy Alexander is currently Professor of Visual Arts: Computing at the University of California, San Diego. Her teaching focuses on contemporary expanded cinema, visual performance, abstract cinema history, and process-based digital media art.[15]
^Ward, A., Rohrhuber, J., Olofsson, F., McLean, A., Griffiths, D., Collins, N., and Alexander, A. (2004). Live Algorithm Programming and a Temporary Organisation for its Promotion. In read_me – Software Art and Cultures.