Reva Stone

Reva Stone is digital artist, native to Winnipeg, whose work explores how technology changes the relationship between humans and our surroundings, and how those relationships have the potential to shape our future.[1][2] She fuses the concepts of performance art, made popular in the 1960s, with digital imaging and other modern forms of expression.[3] As one of the first women to be involved in the new media arts in Canada, her large scale projects influenced many artists she mentored.[4]

Early Career

Stone graduated from the University of Manitoba in 1985.[5] In art school, she originally began as a painter, "but that didn't last long" (according to Stone).[6] Many middle and late 20th century philosophers and artists whose work centers around the collision of art, science, and humanity inspired Stone.[3] She began working on interactive pieces in 1989, after encouragement from Richard Dyck, a fellow Winnipeg, technologically-focused artist, and the piece Legacy was born.[7][6] Legacy, finished in 1993, is a child's room, one wall representing a stereotypical girl and the other representing a stereotypical boy, exploring gender roles of young children.[6] The viewer can interact with the installation through a computer game that cries out "Come play with me," begging for human interaction.[7] Since the early 1990s, Stone has focused almost exclusively on interactive, technologically based art forms.[6]

Current Work

Since 1992, Stone has used technology to isolate and explore specific properties of the human experience. Notably, she has done work with "the misogynistic world of video games, the disciplinary effects of medical science, the stimulation of human intelligence and affect in robotics, and the visual modeling of protein molecules."[1]

Stone has been featured in numerous solo exhibitions as well many group exhibitions.[2] She is also featured in six public collections in Canada and private collections throughout Canada and the United States.[2]

Awards and Recognitions

Stone has received various awards for her art. Most recently, in 2015, Stone was awarded one of the Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts.[4] She was inducted into the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 2007.[8] Carnevale 3.0 was recognized by Life 5.0, Art & Artificial Life International Competition, Fundación Telefónica in Madrid, Spain with an honorable mention.[5] Stone has also received many grants including an Explorations grant and a Manitoba Arts Council Grant in 1990 which funded her first interactive piece, Legacy. She also served on the board of Mentoring Artists for Women's Art (MAWA), Video Pool Inc., and Plug In Institute for Contemporary Art.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Karlinsky, Amy (2004). Reva Stone: Displacement. Canada: The Winnipeg Art Gallery. pp. 15–21.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Curriculum Vitae". Reva Stone. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  3. 1 2 McAlear, Donna (2004). Reva Stone: Displacement. Canada: The Winnipeg Art Gallery. pp. 25–31.
  4. 1 2 "Reva Stone". Governor General's Award. Canada Council for the Arts. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 "Reva Stone". CCCA. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Enright, Robert (March 2007). "The Incredible Lightness of Machines: an interview with Reva Stone". Border Crossings.
  7. 1 2 Fulford, Robert (16 June 1993). "'Issues art' thrives in a vacuum". The Globe and Mail (Canada).
  8. "Cross-section of artists lauded". The Windsor Star. 23 June 2007.

External Links

Official website

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