Eyebeam
540 West 21st Street, 718.222.3982
Chelsea
January 5 - January 26, 2008
Web Site
At a public reception at Eyebeam Saturday, December 15, Executive Director Amanda McDonald Crowley announced the winners of Eyebeam’s two-part, online Eco-Vis Challenge competition. Oz Etzioni’s Unrecyclable Icon was awarded a $2000 grand prize in the Eco-Icons category, and the Studio for Urban Projects’ In Popular Terms, the Evolving Language of Ecology was awarded a $2000 grand prize in the Eco-Visualization category. The winning projects will be previewed during the month of January, and exhibited as part of Eyebeam’s Feedback show in March 2008.
Two proposals in each category received Honorable Mentions and prize money of $150 each, also earmarked for realization of the projects in conjunction with the Feedback exhibition. For Eco-Icons, Green Map was recognized for “creating a comprehensive and inspiring visual system and vocabulary,” and Forays’ project Edible Excess for “the practical application and smart design of an Eco-Icon.” In the Eco-Visualization category, Annina RĂ¼st’se-RiceCooker was named “a wonderful and novel concept for social conviviality and structured participation,” and Timm Kekeritz’s Virtual Water and Water Footprints project was recognized for its “clarity, visual literacy and fluency of design.”
The Eco-Vis Challenge solicited proposals on increasing environmental awareness through creative data interpretation over the course of a four-month period in Fall 2007, and the winners were chosen from a field of 139 proposals.
The competition was juried by engineer and techno-artist Natalie Jeremijenko, mathematician Martin Wattenberg, a researcher at IBM whose work focuses on visual explorations of culturally significant data, Joey Roth, an industrial designer and writer for TreeHugger.com, Casey Caplowe, creative director of GOOD Magazine, Elizabeth Thompson, executive director of the Buckminster Fuller Institute, Eyebeam Alums Michael Mandiberg, and Brooke Singer, with Eyebeam’s Amanda McDonald Crowley and Paul Amitai moderating.
The winning and honored proposals will be on display at Eyebeam in January as a preview for the March 13 – April 19 Feedback exhibition, which will feature the realized proposals alongside work by past and current Eyebeam artists, with others. Both events are part of Eyebeam’s ongoing Beyond Light Bulbs programming series, which grew from the conversations and findings of Eyebeam’s Sustainability Research Group.
The Eco-Vis challenge was crafted by Research Group members Michael Mandiberg a 2007-08 Fellow in the R&D OpenLab and Brooke Singer, an Eyebeam alum.
The Eyebeam Sustainability Research Group began in July 2006 as a forum for past and present residents, fellows, and staff to engage in a critical dialogue about environmental sustainability. The group’s monthly meetings have covered a range of issues, from sharing creative research to working on practical ways to “green” the Eyebeam facility. Out of these meetings, a number of public programs and exhibitions have been developed, including the Eco-Vis Design Challenge, the upcoming Eyebeam exhibition Feedback, and the ambitious 2007-8 program series, Beyond Light Bulbs. Among the Sustainability Research Group reBloggers are: Jennifer Broutin, Carmen Trudell, Brooke Singer, Paul Amitai, Leah Gauthier, Michael Mandiberg and Amanda McDonald Crowley, who have all been contributing content to Eyebeam’s reBlog website. This content, as well as the online eco-vis projects of Ben Engebreth, Brooke Singer and Michael Mandiberg will be on display alongside those of Challenge winners.
Prizes were generously underwritten by Deep Green Living, green consultants for home and business.
Eco-Vis Challenge Finalists Eco-Icons category
Anthony Cesari Warning Stickers Solar One I PV Igo Knezevic Hazardous Climate logo Evan Moran series of eco stickers Nathan Shedroff Reveal: A rating system for consumers Grace Tsai To Be-Recycle Lee Winfield Clothing labels with production locations
Eco-Visualization category
DreamAddictive Labs Atmopspheric Pollution data vis of anthropogenic contaminants Earth Pledge and HydroQual Green Roof Stormwater Simulation Tool LoVid and Douglas Repetto Bonding Energy: Electrogeography and data vis around NY state Erin Williams Energy Production and Loss Kiera Ormut-Fleishman Maintenant: An i-Pod-powered air pollution reader Marilyn Ostergren Environmental impact of electricity consumption at U. of Washington Bart Woodstrup The Hottest Year on Record: Data from Global Mean Temperature Anomalies
Beyond Light Bulbs Schedule
January 5 – 26 Eco-Vis Challenge Preview January 26, 4-6PM Sustainable Project Review and Closing Reception March 13 – April 26 Feedback Exhibition