Brief Description The Blissomatic Surreal is a two-part mixed media installation. Private space signifies the idealism and optimism of the sixties, and seventies, while public space represents the technologically centric pace invading the twenty first century. Installation Description/ Installation Concept Socially sanctioned casualties accrue while we feed the insatiable lust for more materials goods with the product of our labor. In the age of intrusive technology, our labor is increasingly expected to be endlessly available with little additional compensation. The invasion of weekend and evening emails and calls from work convey the new pace, and the impact is far reaching. The two parts of the Blissomatic Surreal juxtapose the humanistic qualities of conflicting eras. The private space of the Blissomatic Surreal is a secure seating area equipped with headphones piping in a peaceful soundscape. The occupant’s gaze will fall on a montage of the silhouette of two bodies in shadow enacting the struggle to connect. The public space emphasizes technological distractions that confound our ability to separate work from leisure. A maze will be constructed of boxes containing statistics about the utilization of technology. The soundscape of clocks ticking and cell phones ringing will permeate the space. Thesis Paper: A Historiography of New Media/Genre Curating and Exhibition Design and Display in the Museum is the working title of the paper. New Media Curating and Exhibition Design and Display is the working title of the paper. This paper explores the most recent professional practices of curating new media in the museum. Included is ethnographic research on new media exhibitions during 2007 and 2008 in New York and San Francisco. This study examines what has worked, what hasn’t, and why. The theoretical component reflects the most current curatorial practices of new media installation and design in the traditional museum. Section 1: Interdisciplinary Terminology Renders a Canon for New Media Improbable Section 2: The History of New Media Technologies and Innovations After Video Section 3: Historiography of New Media Exhibition at SFMoMA and NYMoMA |