Nancy Burson

Nancy Burson (born 1948) is an American artist known for creating photographs using computer morphing technology, including the Age Machine, Human Race Machine and Anomaly Machine.[1]

Biography

Acclaimed artist/photographer Nancy Burson's work is shown in museums and galleries internationally. "Seeing and Believing", her traveling 2002 retrospective originating at the Grey Art Gallery, was nominated for Best Solo Museum Show of the Year in New York City by the International Association of Art Critics. She has served as a visiting professor at Harvard and was a member of the adjunct photography faculty at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts for five years.

Her work is included in museums worldwide including the MoMA, Metropolitan Museum, and the Whitney Museum in New York City, as well as the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Center Georges Pompidou in Paris, the LA County Museum of Art, MoMA (San Francisco), the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, and the Smithsonian Museum in Washington DC, as well as many others.

Burson is best known for her pioneering work in morphing technologies which age enhance the human face and still enable law enforcement officials to locate missing children and adults. Her Human Race Machine, which allows people to view themselves as a different race, is used worldwide as an educational diversity tool that provides viewers with the profound visual experience of being another race.[1]

The Human Race Machine

Nancy Burson’s invention, The Human Race Machine, was inspired by a meeting in mid-1998 with Nancy Burson and one of the staff of Zaha Hadid, the world-famous architect. It made its debut at the Mind Zone in the London Millennium Dome on January 1, 2000[2] and it was seen by millions of people during the entirety of that year. Set in the futuristic environment of Zaha’s Mind Zone, there were four machines and wait lines of sometimes two hours long to use the all new, race morphing technology that had been developed throughout 1999. The Human Race Machine was conceived as an interactive tool for the resolution of humanity’s racial issues. Several other interactive machines had already been developed in the late 80s. These ideas were based on commissions from science museums as well as concepts from the patent that issued to Nancy Burson in 1981 called “The Method and Apparatus for Producing an Image of a Person’s Face at a Different Age.” A few years later, that pioneering patent became the basis for morphing technology for the entire computer graphics industry. A Composite Machine that showed the viewer what they would look like with their face melded with a celebrity had been developed by a science museum from that patent. And there was also an Age Machine that successfully showed viewers what they would look like older. That one had been shown in art museums as early as 1990. That same technology had also been used to find children and adults that had been missing for many years. The software was acquired by the FBI and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. And in 1986, several children were found instantly and returned home using computer generated updates after national TV shows covered the updating process (Missing II, Have You Seen This Person, NBC Special, and Missing III, Have You Seen This Person, NBC Special).[1]

Collaboration

She has collaborated with Creative Time,[3] the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council (LMCC), and Deutsche Bank in completing several important public art projects in New York City. These projects include the poster project Visualize This (Creative Time, 1991), the billboard “There's No Gene For Race" (2000), the poster/postcard project "Focus on Peace" which coincided with the first anniversary of 9/11, and “Looking Up” and “Truth”, 2005.

Burson’s new TogetherAllOne concepts and designs promote the concept of global unity and encompass everything from interactive children’s books to projected lighting installations and original music videos. Recently, her public artworks (2014) have been displayed as videos and works projected in light in both the Berlin Festival of Light and the New York Festival of Light. In the past few years, she has also written two interactive iBooks: You Can Draw The Way You Feel, and You Can Draw Love. Both iBooks were published and produced by FlickerLab, NYC.

Media Features and Publications

Nancy Burson's work has been featured in all forms of media including segments on Oprah (Skin Deep, 2/16/06),[4] Good Morning America (1986, 2002), CNN (2002,1986,1983), National Public Radio (2002),[5] PBS (2001, 1987),[6] and Fuji TV News (2002), as well as countless local TV segments in the USA, Canada and Europe. Prominent articles featuring her work have appeared in The New York Times (March 15, April 14, 2002[7]), The Washington Post (2005),[8] The Houston Chronicle (2002), and Scientific American Magazine (December, 2003)[9] to name a few. There are four monographs of her work and reproductions of it appear in hundreds of art catalogs. It is also featured in text books on the history of photography published in all languages. Burson’s fine art photography is available through ClampArt Gallery in NYC.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.