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UC San Diego + California Institute for Telecommunications & Information Technology

Border Crossers with Chico MacMurtrie and Amorphic Robot Works – Exhibition Premiere

Date: October 5, 2023

Time: 5pm - 6pm

Location: Atkinson Hall, UC San Diego

Host: Ricardo Dominguez

Agenda:
5 p.m. Atkinson Hall auditorium/pre-function area
6 p.m. Reception

RSVPs for opening night requested to galleryqi@ucsd.edu. “Border Crossers” will be open for viewing at the Gallery QI Monday – Friday, noon to 5 p.m. through Friday, December 8, 2023. The Gallery QI is closed weekends.

A livestream to the opening event will be available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeRbptqcPH4.

Summary

On Thursday, October 5 at 5 p.m., join us in the Qualcomm Institute’s Atkinson Hall for the opening of “Border Crossers” from Gallery QI and artist Chico MacMurtrie/Amorphic Robot Works.

The “Border Crossers” exhibition features robotic sculptures, videos and drawings from MacMurtrie’s recent inflatable projects, “Border Crossers” and “Dual Pneuma.” 

Both projects channel MacMurtrie’s aesthetic and political concerns into speculative interventions at or along the U.S.-Mexico border. While his “Border Crossers” inflate over the border fence from both sides at once as a gesture of connection between two countries, the “Dual Pneuma” sculpture embodies the idea of a fluid cultural identity. “Dual Pneuma’s” imagined Fronterizx identity is distilled in its mirrored form and infinite flexibility.

Part of MacMurtrie’s time at QI will be spent working toward a “Border Crossers” performance at the San Diego/Tijuana border while continuing research and development of the “Dual Pneuma” project in conjunction with Mike T. Tolley, Ph.D., Associate Professor with UC San Diego’s Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and the Bioinspired Robotics and Design Lab, and graduate students Shenglin Yang and Allyson Chen.

“Dual Pneuma” is produced by the UC Irvine Beall Center for Art + Technology and will be exhibited in “Future Tense: Art, Complexity and Predictability” at the Beall Center as part of Getty’s PST ART: “Art & Science Collide” from September – December 2024.

Biography

Chico MacMurtrie’s work pushes the boundaries between robotic sculpture, new media installation and performance. After receiving an M.F.A. from UCLA, he became known for his anthropomorphic, computer-controlled sculptures, which evolved over the years into a “Society of Machines.” Today, operating out of a studio in Brooklyn, New York, also known as the “Robotic Church,” MacMurtrie is internationally recognized for his “Inflatable Architectural Bodies” series, which explores the underlying essence of movement and transformation in organic and non-organic bodies. Freestanding or suspended in mid-air, these servo-pneumatic “soft machines” inflate and deflate through an articulated series of movements, depicting imaginary molecular and cellular formations on a magnified scale.

MacMurtrie has received numerous awards for his experimental new media artworks, including five grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Andy Warhol Foundation Grant, the Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, VIDA Life 11.0, and Prix Ars Electronica, the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Mapfund Grant, the New York Fellowship for the Arts and the MAAF Grant.. MacMurtrie/ARW’s works have been presented in major museums and venues around the world, including the National Art Museum of China (NAMOC), Beijing; Hayward Gallery, London; Museo de la Reina Sofia, Madrid; Cité des Sciences et de l’Industrie, Paris; Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo (MUAC), Mexico City; Pioneer Works, Brooklyn, NY; Shanghai Biennale; Tri Postal, Lille, (retrospective exhibition), Mu atwerk, Munich; Ex-Dogana, Rome, ZHI Art Museum, Chengdu; Museum of Contemporary Art, Tucson, AZ; Rubin Center for the Visual Arts (UTEP), El Paso, TX; Queens Museum, Queens, NY and the Bronx Museum for the Visual Arts, Bronx, NY.