Untitled (lizard eye) was a video installation in an elevator consisting of a portable DVD player inside a metal box attached to the inside of the elevator just above the buttons. The DVD player showed a short video of a lizard's eye slowly opening and closing, its pupil dilating and contracting as it appeared to watch the elevator's passengers. This piece was installed at 20 Jay Street in Brooklyn, NY during the 2007 Dumbo Art Under the Bridge Festival.
The disembodied eye references not only surveillance in a traditional sense, but also a kind of "scientific gaze" and the notion of watching as a means to create factual knowledge about the world around us.
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
DRIFT 2008 Show
DRIFT
November 8-10, 2007
Rush Arts Gallery, 526 West 26th Street, Suite 311, New York, NY
Video and performance exhibition.
Thursday, November 8: Video projections on view 11 am - 6 pm
Friday, November 9: Video projections on view 11 am - 6 pm
Reception and live performances from 6 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, November 10: Video projections on view 1 pm - 6 pm
(also my birthday - woo hoo!)
My video Jellyfish Tracing (two moon) will be included in this show.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Upcoming Shows!
Upcoming Shows
DUMBO Art Under the Bridge Festival
September 28-30, 2007
Installation in the elevator at 20 Jay Street, Brooklyn, NY. For more information, see http://dumboartscenter.org/festival.html.
video_dumbo
September 29, 2007, 5:30 pm, 81 Front Street, Brooklyn, NY
Video screening. Opening reception will be September 28, 2007 at 8:30 pm, also at 81 Front Street. For more information, see http://www.m-o-s-t-r-a.com/video_dumbo/video_dumbo2007.html
DRIFT 2008
November 9-10, 2007, Rush Arts Gallery, 526 West 26th Street, Suite 311, New York, NY
Video and performance exhibition.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Tracing (red and black fish holding still)
single channel video
2007
Tracing (red and black fish holding still) is part of a project in which I am mapping the undulating motions of jellyfish and other sea creatures using a video effect called motion tracking. Motion tracking allows you to create a motion “path” based on the location of a chosen point within your video image as it moves over the duration of the clip. By applying a paint effect to the resulting path, I generate a kind of tracing.
2007
Tracing (red and black fish holding still) is part of a project in which I am mapping the undulating motions of jellyfish and other sea creatures using a video effect called motion tracking. Motion tracking allows you to create a motion “path” based on the location of a chosen point within your video image as it moves over the duration of the clip. By applying a paint effect to the resulting path, I generate a kind of tracing.
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Shell insides
Observations - installation diagram
installation diagram
2004
dimensions variable
ant farm, surveillance camera, live video projection, corrugated plastic, wood, etc.
Observations consisted of a transparent maze-like structure that controlled how viewers moved through the installation. After entering through a marked opening, viewers found a shelf containing an ant farm at the end of the first corridor. A small camera mounted behind the ant farm transmitted a live video to a projector in the next room. Because of the physical separation between the ant farm and the live video projection, viewers could not watch themselves watching the ant farm, but could watch others that entered after they did (second image).
2004
dimensions variable
ant farm, surveillance camera, live video projection, corrugated plastic, wood, etc.
Observations consisted of a transparent maze-like structure that controlled how viewers moved through the installation. After entering through a marked opening, viewers found a shelf containing an ant farm at the end of the first corridor. A small camera mounted behind the ant farm transmitted a live video to a projector in the next room. Because of the physical separation between the ant farm and the live video projection, viewers could not watch themselves watching the ant farm, but could watch others that entered after they did (second image).
Observations - detail, ant farm and surveillance camera
Latent Prints/Reading Room
installation detail, day 5 [1]
2003
dimensions variable
fingerprint powder, clear acrylic sealer, books, magnifying glasses, wooden table, etc.
This installation included a table, chairs, books on fingerprints, magnifying glass, and food—all colored white—creating a comfortable space for students to relax. At the end of each of the five days the installation was open, I dusted the space for fingerprints, then fixed the resulting prints with clear sealer so that fingerprints accumulated over time.
2003
dimensions variable
fingerprint powder, clear acrylic sealer, books, magnifying glasses, wooden table, etc.
This installation included a table, chairs, books on fingerprints, magnifying glass, and food—all colored white—creating a comfortable space for students to relax. At the end of each of the five days the installation was open, I dusted the space for fingerprints, then fixed the resulting prints with clear sealer so that fingerprints accumulated over time.
Latent Prints/Reading Room [detail 2]
Latent Prints/Reading Room [detail 3]
Resume
KATY HIGGINS
www.katyhiggins.com
katyhiggins (at) gmail.com
EDUCATION
Master of Fine Arts in Visual Arts – 2004
Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey
Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art – 1999
Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
SELECTED EXHIBITIONS
2008
Dumbo Art Under the Bridge Festival, Brooklyn, NY
1800FRAMES|Take4, City Without Walls, Newark, New Jersey. Traveling to Moment Factory in Montreal, Canada; Parsons, The New School for Design and 207 Gallery in New York City; and other venues TBA.
2007
Drift 2007, Rush Arts Gallery, New York, NY
video_dumbo, Brooklyn, NY
Dumbo Art Under the Bridge Festival, Brooklyn, NY
2004
*Observations, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
The Odds, City Without Walls, Newark, NJ
2003
Annual Fall Exhibition, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2002
Uncommon Threads: New Twists on Textile Art, The Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, NH
First Year Review, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2001
*Documentation, William Holland Drury & William Holland Drury Jr. Gallery, Marlboro College, Marlboro, VT
1999
*Blueprints, SRO Photo Gallery, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX
Reinventions, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
Image Ohio, Roy G. Biv Gallery, Columbus, OH
1998
Untitled, Burren College of Art, Ballyvaughan, Co. Clare, Ireland
1997
Works on Paper, McDonough Museum of Art, Youngstown, OH
*solo exhibition
AWARDS, GRANTS, AND RESIDENCIES
2002
Leon Golub Scholarship, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2001
Visiting artist, Marlboro College, Marlboro, VT
Residency, Dorland Mountain Art Colony, Temecula, CA
2000
Studio artist, Revolving Museum, Boston, MA
1999
Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
www.katyhiggins.com
katyhiggins (at) gmail.com
EDUCATION
Master of Fine Arts in Visual Arts – 2004
Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey
Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art – 1999
Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
SELECTED EXHIBITIONS
2008
Dumbo Art Under the Bridge Festival, Brooklyn, NY
1800FRAMES|Take4, City Without Walls, Newark, New Jersey. Traveling to Moment Factory in Montreal, Canada; Parsons, The New School for Design and 207 Gallery in New York City; and other venues TBA.
2007
Drift 2007, Rush Arts Gallery, New York, NY
video_dumbo, Brooklyn, NY
Dumbo Art Under the Bridge Festival, Brooklyn, NY
2004
*Observations, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
The Odds, City Without Walls, Newark, NJ
2003
Annual Fall Exhibition, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2002
Uncommon Threads: New Twists on Textile Art, The Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, NH
First Year Review, Civic Square Building Gallery, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2001
*Documentation, William Holland Drury & William Holland Drury Jr. Gallery, Marlboro College, Marlboro, VT
1999
*Blueprints, SRO Photo Gallery, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX
Reinventions, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
Image Ohio, Roy G. Biv Gallery, Columbus, OH
1998
Untitled, Burren College of Art, Ballyvaughan, Co. Clare, Ireland
1997
Works on Paper, McDonough Museum of Art, Youngstown, OH
*solo exhibition
AWARDS, GRANTS, AND RESIDENCIES
2002
Leon Golub Scholarship, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
2001
Visiting artist, Marlboro College, Marlboro, VT
Residency, Dorland Mountain Art Colony, Temecula, CA
2000
Studio artist, Revolving Museum, Boston, MA
1999
Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
Ant Farm [2] - installation diagram
installation diagram, days 1–4
2003
dimensions variable
live video projection, ant farm, ants, markers, paper, etc.
In this installation, I projected a live video image of an ant farm containing active ants on one wall of a small room. The ant farm was visible through a peephole in an enclosed unit on the opposite wall. The installation also included a table holding a marker dispenser that kept twenty markers in a spectral sequence. On the wall above the dispenser, a log chart was posted. The chart directed the viewer to “Please record the time and date of your trace.” Viewers took a colored marker from one end of the dispenser, traced the projection on the wall, and recorded the time, date, and marker color on the chart. Viewers interpreted the direction to “trace” differently—some traced the tunnels the ants created, others documented the movements of the ants themselves. After four days, the projection was removed and the lights were turned on so viewers could examine the finished wall drawing.
2003
dimensions variable
live video projection, ant farm, ants, markers, paper, etc.
In this installation, I projected a live video image of an ant farm containing active ants on one wall of a small room. The ant farm was visible through a peephole in an enclosed unit on the opposite wall. The installation also included a table holding a marker dispenser that kept twenty markers in a spectral sequence. On the wall above the dispenser, a log chart was posted. The chart directed the viewer to “Please record the time and date of your trace.” Viewers took a colored marker from one end of the dispenser, traced the projection on the wall, and recorded the time, date, and marker color on the chart. Viewers interpreted the direction to “trace” differently—some traced the tunnels the ants created, others documented the movements of the ants themselves. After four days, the projection was removed and the lights were turned on so viewers could examine the finished wall drawing.
from Ant Farm series (Composite 2 Difference)
from Ant Farm series (Positive Composite)
from Ant Farm series (Front & Back Simultaneously)
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