Sougwen Chung

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Sougwen Chung (鍾愫君)
Born
Toronto, ON, Canada

Sougwen Chung (鍾愫君) is a Chinese-born, Canadian-raised artist residing in New York City.[1] Chung's critical practices are based on performance, drawing, still image, sculpture and installation.[2] Chung's work investigates mark-made-by machine and mark-made-by-hand for understanding the encounter of computers and humans.[3]

Early life[]

Chung grew up in Toronto, Canada, and Hong Kong (where her parents are from). Her father, an opera singer, made sure that his children had experience with musical instruments at a very young age, and Chung grew up playing violin and piano. She moved to the States as a teenager and received her BFA from Indiana University before obtaining her Masters Diploma in Interactive Art from Hyper Island in Sweden.[4]

Career[]

Chung's work has been shown at galleries and museums across the world, including MAMCO in Geneva, Switzerland and Istanbul's Akbank Sanat.[5] Chung has spoken globally at conferences including Tribeca Film, New York; The Hospital Club, London; MUTEK Festival, Montreal & Mexico City; Sonar Festival, Barcelona. The Art Directors Club, New York; Stockholm; SXSW, Austin; Tokyo; Internet Dargana, Barcelona: FITC; New York; OFFF, Barcelona; Gray Area Festival, San Francisco.[6][7][8] Her work has also been featured in multiple international press outlets including The New Yorker, Art F City, Dazed and Confused, The Creators Project, MASHABLE, Engadget, Business Insider, Fast Company and USA Today.[4][9][10]

Chung is a former researcher at MIT's Media Lab and an inaugural member of NEW INC, the first museum-led technology and art in collaboration with The New Museum.[4] According to the World Science Festival 2018, she is an Artist-In-Residence at Bell Labs exploring new forms of drawing in virtual reality, with biometrics, machine learning, and robotics.[11]

An example of her work is the 2017 "Drawing Operations Unit." It is an exploration into how machine learning might be applied to the drawing style of the artist's hand. The robotic arm's behavior is generated from neural nets trained on the artist's drawing gestures.[12] In a sense, the robotic arm has learned from the visual style of the artist's previous drawings and outputs a machine interpretation during the human/robot drawing duet.[13]

In 2019 Chung presented a talk at TED@BCG Mumbai titled "Why I draw with robots".[14]

Selected Works[]

  • Drawing Operations Unit: Generation 2 (Memory) (2017) — Performance involving robotic memory.
  • Drawing Operations Unit: Generation 1 (Mimicry) (2015) — An ongoing collaboration between an artist and a robotic arm.
  • Embryo (Étude OP. 5, No. 5) (2015) — Mixed media, commissioned by OFFF for OFFF Unmasked.
  • Praesentia (2015) — "As a pencil moves about the paper, its path is local and confined; freed from the need to consider the totality, it can respond immediately to “where the hand is now in praesentia.".[15]
  • Praesentia Sculptures (2013) — 3D printed drawn sculptural prototypes printed in gold, made with custom software. Exhibited at the MIT Media Lab 2013. Currently, they are prototypes for a forthcoming series examining dimensional mark making.

References[]

  1. ^ Marletta, Donata. "Organic Form and Digital Visions. An Interview with Sougwen Chung". Digicult. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  2. ^ Noergaard, Ulrik. "Sougwen Chung". Dazed. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  3. ^ "Sougwen Chung". FITC. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Shin, Nara. "Charged: Sougwen Chung". Cool Hunting. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  5. ^ "NonSpaces | Akbank Sanat". www.akbanksanat.com. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  6. ^ "TFI Interactive". Tribeca Film Institute. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  7. ^ "Sougwen Chung". The Gray Area Festival. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  8. ^ "Schedule | sxsw.com". SXSW Schedule 2014. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  9. ^ Dazed (2011-06-30). "Sougwen Chung". Dazed. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  10. ^ Saini, Shivam. "This robotic arm draws almost as well as a human artist — because it sort of is one". Business Insider. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  11. ^ "Sougwen Chung | World Science Festival". World Science Festival. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  12. ^ "Sougwen Chung – Artist Profile (Photos, Videos, Exhibitions)". AIArtists.org. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  13. ^ "Sougwen Chung – Art Gallery". nips4creativity.com. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  14. ^ "Why I draw with robots". TED Conferences, LLC. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  15. ^ "sougwen". Sougwen. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
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