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ZERO1

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ZERO1
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ZERO1: The Art and Technology Network is a non-profit organization, dedicated to connecting people from the fields of art, science, and technology.[1] Every other year, ZERO1 showcases commissioned art of over 650 artists from 60 countries.

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History

ZERO1 was launched in 2000 by Andrea Cunningham to encourage creativity at the intersection of art and technology.

The organization brings together artists and technologists, supports artistic initiatives, and showcases the resulting work to the public.

ZERO1 is also the producer of ZERO1 Biennial, a multi-disciplinary, multi-venue event of visual and performing arts, the moving image, public art, and interactive digital media.[1]

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ZERO1 Biennial

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Since its establishment in 2006, the ZERO1 Biennial has presented the work of more than 650 artists from more than 60 countries, commissioned over 120 works of art, and contributed approximately $30,000,000 in economic revenue to the region. Through exhibitions, public art installations, performances, and speaker events, the ZERO1 Biennial presents work by a global community of artists.[1]

The inaugural 2006 Biennial held in conjunction with the International Society for Electronic Arts brought over 20,000 people to San Jose for a week. It featured 250 art installations representing 40 countries. The 2006 Biennial yielded nearly 100 media stories including a full-page spread in the Sunday New York Times,[2] and was recognized as North America's newest and largest digital arts biennial.[3]

From June 4–8, 2008, over 25,000 attendees visited 100 art installations, 25+ performances, workshops, and public talks by over 100 artists from more than a dozen countries at exhibitions held throughout downtown San Jose; students from seven continents participated in a global youth digital arts exhibition. The biennial commissioned over 19 works, of which 3 were the result of a FUSE: CADRE/Montalvo Artist Research Residency Initiative, and supported an additional 29 projects.[4][5][6]

In September 2010, there were over 47,000 visitors and over 100 artists, designers, engineers, filmmakers, musicians, architects and avant-garde creators from 21 countries. Led by ZERO1 artistic director Steve Dietz, assistant curator Jaime Austin, and ZERO1's executive director Joel Slayton, the 2010 ZERO1 Biennial featured works by David Rockwell and The Lab, Brody Condon, Natalie Jeremijenko, Rigo23, Todd Chandler, Blast Theory, and others.[7]

The 2012 Biennial invited more than 150 artists from over 13 countries to present works, collaborating with local, regional, national, and international cultural institutions and Silicon Valley companies to showcase 3 months of exhibitions, events, and performances. The core Biennial exhibition, also called Seeking Silicon Valley, was curated by 5 international curators and included 24 international artists from 11 countries, including 18 commissions. 51 Biennial projects were installed in public space, 28 of those public art projects were for (e)MERGE, the ZERO1 Street festival, which engaged 86 collaborating artists.

Bay Lights

The Bay Lights is a light sculpture celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco by artist Leo Villareal. The sculpture is 1.8 miles wide and 500 feet high, incorporating 25,000 individually programmed LED lights driven by a set of algorithms and patterns in a display across the bridge's west span. ZERO1 was invited to be the fiscal sponsor, contracted with Illuminate the Arts, to provide fiscal stewardship for the world's largest light sculpture and currently the nation's largest public art project.[8]

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Programs

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American Arts Incubator

ZERO1, in partnership with the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA), launched a new media and mural arts program, American Arts Incubator. Inspired by the "business incubator" model made popular by Silicon Valley's technology and start-up companies, the American Arts Incubator is a hybrid training lab, production workshop, and tool for public engagement.

The selected U.S. artists team up with youth and underserved populations, through country-based partnerships, to inspire ideas for community engagement through art programs. American Arts Incubator awards micro-grants to community-driven digital media or mural arts projects proposed by artist teams who live in each overseas community.[9]

ZERO1 Fellowship

The ZERO1 Fellowship program was developed as a platform for artistic experimentation. Working in collaboration with partner companies, cultural institutions, and academic research centers, ZERO1 Fellows are asked to cultivate lines of artistic research and cultural production in response to a challenge. ZERO1 Fellows participate in cross-sector collaboration and problem solving while leveraging emerging technology, resources, and expertise provided by sponsors. The Fellowship network is further informed by ZERO1 exhibitions, talks, publishing, and events.[10]

ZERO1 Garage

In 2012 ZERO1 launched the Garage to complement the Biennial as the next phase in the organization's evolution. The Garage's design by architect Chris Haas received a 2013 Merit Award from the AIA San Francisco's Design Award Program. Part research lab, part exhibitions center, the ZERO1 Garage was both a physical space and a conceptual platform where exhibitions, artist talks, panels, and symposia could take place for the next three years.[11]

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References

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