September 2, 2014 – January 4, 2015 – Asheville Art Museum , North Carolina

Humans and Machines: The Robotic Worlds of Adrianne Wortzel

Solo exhibition of videos: The Veils of Transference and archipelago.ch

July 22, 2014 – Women in Art and Technology, at A.I.R. Gallery, New York

Women in Art and Technology
2014

VERSION II: July 22, 2014

A.I.R. Gallery and 2013–14 Fellowship Artist, Amelia Marzec, are pleased to announce the second installment of “Women in Art and Technology,” an evening of presentations, discussion, and exhibitions.

Technology is the medium we use to communicate today, but we still experience a gender gap and a generation gap in terms of women’s participation in technology as a creative medium. A.I.R. Gallery invites artists, curators, creative technologists, critics, historians and researchers with an interest in women, art, and technology to join us on July 22 for an evening event. We’ll talk about women trailblazers in new media; enjoy presentations and exhibitions by digital artists; and hold a roundtable discussion to consider these issues within the larger context of the history of art. Our interest is in creating a platform for further conversations and participation at the first all female cooperative gallery in the United States.

Speakers:
Adrianne Wortzel
Ursula Endlicher
Abby Echiverri
Marisa Olson
Bang Geul Han

Demos/Exhibition:
Laurel Ptak
Sarah Grant
Caleigh Fisher
Daria Dorosh
Amanda Turner Pohan
Adrianne Wortzel
Ursula Endlicher
Abby Echiverri
Marisa Olson
Bang Geul Han
Amelia Marzec

Tuesday, July 22, 2014 from 6-9pm
A.I.R. Gallery
111 Front Street, #228
Brooklyn, NY 11201
FREE with suggested donation

May 26-June 23, 2014 -WISC Residency, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Scholar-in-Residence at The Women’s International Study Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico from May 26-June 23, 2014.

The mission of the Women’s International Study Center is to interpret the lives and advance the contributions to the arts, sciences, cultural preservation and business

Ms. Wortzel will research and create development plans for her project “The Eye of the Storm has the Warmest Temperature” –a multimedia performance production emerging from the story of Edith Warner and her teahouse at the crossroads of the worlds of the San Ildefonso Pueblo and The Manhattan Project in the1940s. In 2012, Wortzel was one of five artists chosen to participate in Science and Research Collaborations, initiated as part of ISEA2012, with Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories and the University of New Mexico.


The Eye of the Storm Has the Warmest Temperature

http://wisc-amh.org/