Linda Dement

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Linda Dement (born 1960 in Brisbane) is an

digital arts, photography, film, and writing non-fiction.[1] Dement is largely known for her exploration of the creative possibilities of emergent technologies such as the CD-ROM, 3-D modelling, interactive software, and early computing.[2][3]

About

She began exhibiting in 1984.

Dement's work has been exhibited in Australia and internationally in galleries and festivals, including at the

Sydney and Montreal and the Impakt Media Arts Festival in Europe.[6]

Along with Australian artist collective VNS Matrix, Dement's work pioneered Australian cyberfeminism in art. Cyberfeminist politics and poetics used technology to deconstruct gender stereotypes in mainstream culture, and proactively situated women in relation to the rise of electronic culture in the early 1990s.[7] Through her work, Dement aims to "give form to the unbearable."[8] Dement's work has been described as depersonalised autobiography,[9] that is, an appropriation of the digital as a space of expression, or a "rupture" in the info-tech dominated sphere of computer culture.[10] Her work explores the relationship between the physical body and the body politic, exaggerating female "other-ness" or the "monstrous-feminine."[11]


Censorship

Some of Dement's early works have come under censorship by the Australian Government. Typhoid Mary was taken to the NSW Parliament as being "obscene" and subsequently came under the classification of the Australian Government's Office of Film and Literature as "not suitable for those under the age of 18." In My Gash also received a formal "Restricted" classification.[12]

Works

Works
Year Title Media Notes
2013 Awry Signals Performance art, augmented reality, and mixed media for the creation of the electronic device a collaboration with Nancy Mauro-Flude to create a séance device and performance
2013 50BPM a collaboration with Kelly Doley
2013 Kill Fix
2012 Moving Forest Nicknamed "Castle 2012"
2011 Killing the Host
2010 Bloodbath Bump Projects; a collaboration with Francesca da Rimini, Kate Richards, Nancy Mauro-Flude, Sarah Waterson and Sydney Roller Derby League.
2009 The Ends of the Earth a collaboration with Jane Castle[13]
2009 On Track a collaboration with group In Serial; Linda Dement, Petra Gemeinboeck, PRINZGAU/podgorschek and Marion Tränkle, formed through the eMobilArt workshop programme 2008 - 2009
2008 Moving Forest London a collaboration with Shu Lea Cheang and Martin Howse for the Transmediale Festival in Berlin, Germany.
2007 I Know You Think It's Too Late
2007–1997 Eurydice a collaboration with Kathy Acker
1999 In My Gash CD-ROM
1995 Cyberflesh Girlmonster CD-ROM To make this work, Dement set up a stall as part of Artist Week at Adelaide Festival in 1994. She then digitally scanned 30 women's body parts of their choice. These scanned body parts were then digitally manipulated and reworked as "mutant" bodies to make up the work. Many of the "flesh donors" were prominent Australian cyberfeminist artists present at the Festival.[11]
1991 Typhoid Mary CD-ROM [14]
1991–1981 Various photographic works

Writing

  • Artists Thinking About Science (with Helen Watson-Verran et al.). Adelaide, S.A.: Australian Network for Art and Technology, 1994.[15]
  • I Really Want to Kill You But I Can't Remember Why (with Jasmine Hirst et al.). Woolloomooloo, NSW: Artspace Australia, 1995.[16]
  • "Girl #4 Late 70s," in Peter Blazey et al. (eds.), Love Cries. Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1995[17]
  • "Payment," in Leonie Stevens (ed.), Warp Drive. Milsons Point, NSW: Random House, 1998[18]
  • Byte Me: art + culture + technology (with Kevin Murray et al.). Bendigo, Vic.: Bendigo Art Gallery, 1999[19]

Awards and Prizes

  • Dement was twice awarded the Harries Australian National Digital Art Award in 2005 and 2006,
    Australia Council for the Arts, Best CD-ROM at the 9th Stuttgarter Filmwinter Festival in Germany; and Honorable Mentions by New Voices/New Visions, Palo Alto, California; and Ars Electronica, Austria.[4]

References

  1. ^ Daniel Palmer, "Digital Art: A Rich Ecology Archived 2014-02-12 at the Wayback Machine"
  2. ^ Zurbrugg, Nicholas, ed. (1994). ' Linda Dement Interviewed by Glenda Nalder', Electronic Arts in Australia. Vol. 8. Murdoch, W.A: Continuum: The Australian Journal of Media & Culture. p. 166.
  3. ^ Abrams, Loney (4 January 2019). "The Other Art History: The Forgotten Cyberfeminists of '90s Net Art". Artspace. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  4. ^ a b 'Linda Dement' by Vickie Crowley in Gerstner, David A., ed. Routledge international encyclopedia of queer culture. Routledge, 2006.
  5. ^ Frost, Andrew. "Linda Dement Biography". Scanlines-Media Art in Australia Since 1960. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  6. ^ Munster, Anna. Materializing new media: embodiment in information aesthetics. UPNE, 2011.
  7. .
  8. ^ Dement, Linda. "Linda Dement artist statement". www.videoartchive.org.au/. Monash University. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  9. ^ Mikki Halpin, Holly Willis (1996). "When the personal becomes digital: Linda dement and Barbara Hammer move towards a Lesbian Cyberspace". Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory. 9:1 (17): 235.
  10. .
  11. ^ .
  12. .
  13. . Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  14. ^ "Typhoid Mary, Linda Dement". Australian Video Art Archive (AVAA). Monash University. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  15. OCLC 221760074
    .
  16. .
  17. .
  18. .
  19. .
  20. ^ Frost, Andrew. "Linda Dement bio". Scanlines.

External links