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Catherine
Richards is a visual artist working with old and new technologies.
The Canada Council for the Arts awarded the Media Arts Prize (Petro
Canada 1993) to her work Spectral Bodies for using virtual
reality technology, as an outstanding and innovative use of
new technologies in media arts. She received a Canadian Centre
for the Visual Arts Fellowship (1993 to 1994) at the National Gallery
of Canada. In addition, she co-directed the BIOAPPARATUS, an interdisciplinary
residency on art, intimacy, and new technologies at the Banff Centre
for the Arts (Canadian Conference of the Arts, Corel Prize, 1992).
In 1991, Richards created Spectral Bodies with the first
virtual reality system in Canada at the Computer Science Department,
University of Alberta and the Banff Centre for the Arts. In 1993,
her interactive installation, Virtual Body, was commissioned
and shown at the Antwerp 93 Festival in Belgium and in the following
exhibitions: Teckno Viscera, Institute of Modern Art,
Brisbane, Australia; The Body Obsolete, SAW Gallery,
Ottawa, January, 1994; and Arte Virtual in Madrid, Spain.
It was awarded an honourable mention at ARS Electronica 94, and
was invited to 15 years of ARS Electronica at Landesgalerie,
Museum of Contemporary Art, Linz, Austria,1994, and to the International
Symposium of Electronic Art (ISEA), in Helsinki, Finland, 1994.
The piece Curiosity Cabinet at the end of the Millennium
was commissioned for Self Determination / Body Politic,
at the Gemeentenmuseum, Arnhem, Holland, 1995, and shown at ISEA,
Montreal, 1995; Aurora, Interaccess, Toronto, 1998;
and Dunlop Gallery, Regina, 1999. In 1996, Richards was artist in
residence at the National Gallery of Canada. The Gallery commissioned
her new-media work, Charged Hearts in July, 1997, which
has since been exhibited at the Powerplant Gallery, Habourfront,
Toronto, 1998; Walter Phillips Gallery, Banff Centre for the Arts,
1998; Wayne State University, Detroit; Dunlop Gallery, Regina, 1999;
and Dalhousie Art Gallery, Halifax, 2000. Three new works were exhibited
in Excitable Tissues, Ottawa Art Gallery, 2000: I
was scared to death / I could have died of joy; Shroud/Chrysalis,
and Method and Apparatus for Finding Love.
Richards works have been supported by the Canada Council for
the Arts; AT&T Canada; The Claudia De Hueck Fellowship in Art
and Science at the National Gallery of Canada; the Daniel Langlois
Foundation for Art, Science and Technologies; the Ontario Arts Council;
the National Research Council; and by the generous contributions
of individual scientists.
She was invited to speak at such conferences as the Virtual
Reality at Culture, Technology and Creativity, London, England,
1991; Japan '92, The Third Video Festival in Tokyo; Towards
the Aesthetics of the Future at the Institute of Contemporary
Arts (ICA) and The British Arts Council (BAC), London, England,
in 1993; Deuxièmes rencontres internationales art cinéma/art
vidéo/art ordinateur at Vidéothèque de
Paris in 1994; Cyberconf 94, ISEA, Finland, 1994; New Technology,
Art, and Gender at the ICA and BAC, London, England, 1994;
Ideology of Interactivity: freedom, choice and creativity,
International Symposium of Electronic Art, Montreal, 1995; Flesh
Eating Technologies, New Media Art and the Body, Banff Centre
for the Arts, 1998; College Art Association Conference (CAA), Toronto,
1998; Des Souris et des oeuvres, table ronde, Université
du Québec à Montréal, 1999; Cartographies,
The General Assembly on New Media Art; Towards a Definition of New
Media Art; Canadian Cartography, (ISEA), Montreal, 1999; Curating
New Media Symposium, Ottawa Art Gallery: Ottawa, 2001; Creativity
and Innovation, New Collaboration between the Arts and Sciences,
National Research Council, 2002.
Richards works have been generously supported by the Canada
Council for the Arts' Media Arts Section; the Canada Council for
the Arts' Millennium Arts Fund; the National Gallery of Canada;
the Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science and Technology;
the National Research Council of Canada; the Ontario Arts Council;
the Banff Center for the Arts; the University Research Fund of the
University of Ottawa; and by significant collaborations with individual
scientists.
Her published articles include: Virtual Bodies, What a Blow
that Phantom Gave Me in the media art catalogue Angles
of Incidence, The Banff Centre for the Arts, 1993; and republished
in Europe in French and Spanish; in Public 11: Throughput,
Toronto, Winter 1995; and in Public 19/20: Lexicon: 20th Century
AD, 2000, Virtual reality, It's Deja Vu All Over Again
in Canadatext(e), Semiotext(e), NY, 1994 A
Letter on Fungal Intimacy: Art, New Media and the Feminist Tropes
in Fractal Dreams: New Media in Social Context, ed. Jon
Dovy, Lawrence & Wishart Ltd, London, 1995, and revised in Clicking
In: Hot Links to a Digital Culture, ed. Lyn Hershman, Bay Press,
San Francisco, 1996 Excitable Tissues in Flesh
Eating Technologies, forthcoming, Banff Press and Semiotext,
N.Y.
Her work has been discussed in: Catherine Richards, Excitable
Tissues, published by the Ottawa Art Gallery (forthcoming),
which includes essays by Professor Frances Dyson (UC Davis), Professor
Katherine Hayles (UCLA), and Dot Tuer (OCAD); Art and Feminism,
Reckitt Helena and Peggy Phelan (Eds.), (London: Phaidon Press Ltd.,
2001.); in the catalogue, Engaging the Virtual, Dalhousie
Art Gallery, Halifax, 2000; by Professor Kim Sawchuk, Reviews: Catherine
Richards, The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, July 10
to September 14; Parachute, January to March, 1998 (Canada);
Charged Havens by Frances Dyson in World Art,
September 1996 (U.S.); Embodied Virtuality: Or How to Put
Bodies Back in the Picture by Katherine Hayles in Immersed
in Technology: Art and Virtual Environments, (Cambridge: MIT
Press, 1995); by Marie-Luise Angerer, alt.feminism/alt.sex/alt.identity/alt.theory/alt.art,
in Springer, June 1995 (Austria); by Kate Davies, art
and gender on the net in World Art, no. 2., 1995
(U.S.); by Erica Humato, Excavation Area, A Virtual Gallery
of Archeological Art, InterCommunication, 1995 (Japan).
Catherine Richards is one of the first recipients of a two year
Artist-in-Residence for Research (AIRes) fellowship jointly established
by the Canada Council for the Arts and the National Research Council
of Canada (NRC) for her research that will be pursued in collaboration
with the Institute for Information Technology in Ottawa in 2003.
Richards is currently an Associate Professor at the Department of
Visual Arts, at the University of Ottawa.
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