Sepbember 14, 2012 - The UCLA Department of Design | Media Arts (DMA) is offering a variety of events for the public's enjoyment this fall, including exhibitions and lectures. For events at the UCLA Broad Art Center's New Wight Gallery (Room 1100), EDA facility (Room 1250) or Game Lab (Room 3252), all-day parking ($11) and short-term parking (payable at pay stations) are available in Lot 3 (enter campus at Hilgard Avenue and Wyton Drive). All-day parking ($11) for events at the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) is available in Lot 9 (enter campus at the intersection of Manning Avenue or Le Conte Avenue with Hilgard Avenue, or at the intersection of Westwood and Wilshire boulevards). Visit www.dma.ucla.edu for live streaming coverage of lectures. Programs are subject to change. For updated information, gallery hours and confirmation of events, call 310-825-9007 or visit www.dma.ucla.edu. FREE EXHIBITION Oct. 18–25 Design | Media Arts M.F.A. Graduate Exhibition Opening reception: Thursday, Oct. 18, 5–8 p.m. New Wight Gallery (Room 1100), Broad Art Center This group exhibition features works by UCLA Design | Media Arts M.F.A. graduate students Gottfried Haider, Nicholas Hanna, Phoebe Hui, Kian Peng (Ben) Ong, Christopher Reilly, Dennis Rosenfeld and Richard Wheeler. FREE LECTURES & EVENTS Monday, Oct. 8 12:15 p.m. Design | Media Arts Lunchtime Faculty Lecture Series Erkki Huhtamo — "Accidents on the 'Walking Road,' or, A Media Archaeology of the Moving Walkway" EDA (Room 1250), Broad Art Center Speeding through LAX toward our departure gate, we routinely step on the moving walkway, paying hardly any attention to it. In 1900 things were different. "Le trottoir roulant" was the most sensational novelty of the Paris Universal Exposition. It circled the exposition grounds, challenging the visitors' ideas of mobility and vision, causing accidents and invoking wild fantasies about future societies where everything would be in motion. This lecture excavates the early history of the moving walkway, demonstrating how it became interwoven with ideas of modernity and the evolving urban space. Tuesday, Oct. 9 6 p.m. Design | Media Arts Lecture Erwin Redl — 'Structures of Time and Space' EDA (Room 1250), Broad Art Center Working in both two and three dimensions, Austrian-born artist Erwin Redl uses LEDs as an artistic medium, redefining interior and exterior spaces. His installations, videos, graphics, computer art and electronic media have received national and international attention and have been featured in Matrix VI at the 2002 Whitney Biennial, Fade I at the Eglise Sainte-Marie Madeleine, and Matrix II, which was shown in New York, Germany, France, Austria and Korea. Monday, Oct. 15 12:15 p.m. Design | Media Arts Lunchtime Faculty Lecture Series Jennifer Steinkamp — 'Panspermia' EDA (Room 1250), Broad Art Center Jennifer Steinkamp is an installation artist who exhibits internationally and works with new media and video to explore ideas about architectural space, motion and perception. Tuesday, Nov. 13 6 p.m. Design | Media Arts Lecture Suzanne Anker EDA (Room 1250), Broad Art Center Suzanne Anker is a visual artist and theorist working at the intersection of art and the biological sciences. Her works include digital sculpture, installations and large-scale photography. (Hosted by the UCLA Art|Sci Center.) ART|SCI CENTER LECTURES, EXHIBITIONS & EVENTS Art|Sci programs are held in the Art|Sci Gallery and Presentation Room (fifth floor) at the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, unless otherwise noted. For updated information, please visit http://artsci.ucla.edu. Thursday, Oct. 4 5 p.m. Art|Sci Lecture + Demonstration Katherine Moriwaki and Angelo Vermeulen Interaction designer Katherine Moriwaki and art-scientist Angelo Vermeulen present their collaborative projects, which cross boundaries between biotechnology, interface design and community activism. Thursday, Oct. 25 5 p.m. Art|Sci Exhibition + North | South Mixer Rita Blaik — Art|Sci Fellow Rita Blaik, an Art|Sci fellow, IGERT clean-energy fellowship recipient and doctoral student in materials science, presents her ephemeral photographs that cross the boundaries on materiality. The exhibition will be followed by the North | South Mixer and the introduction of the newly formed Undergraduate Art and Science Club. Thursday, Nov. 15 5 p.m. Art | Sci Exhibition Suzanne Anker + molecular cuisine tasting Art | Sci Gallery, California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI) Suzanne Anker, a visual artist and theorist working at the intersection of art and the biological sciences, will present her work. GAME LAB LECTURES & EVENTS Game Lab programs are held in the UCLA Game Lab (Room 3252) of the Broad Art Center at UCLA, unless otherwise noted. For updated information, please visit http://games.ucla.edu/. Thursday, Sept. 27 6–9 p.m. Game Lab Lecture Chris Solarski on Art in Games Join UCLA Game Lab for a talk with Chris Solarski, author of the new book "Drawing Basics and Video Game Art: Classic to Cutting-Edge Art Technigques for Winning Video Game Design." Monday, Oct. 1 6–9 p.m. Game Lab Lecture 'The Game of Sunken Places' The Game Lab is proud to present "The Game of Sunken Places," an educational meta LARP (live action roll playing game) by Live Game Labs. Skills learned from this experience will be applied to the LARP Design Workshop to take place the same week. Tuesday, Oct. 2 and Thursday, Oct. 4 6–9 p.m. LARP Design Workshop Participants will collaboratively design a live action roll playing (LARP) game to be featured at the Fairfax High Swap Meet. This workshop will be led by Seekers Unlimited, a new nonprofit organization specializing in educational LARPing. Thursday, Oct. 11 6–9 p.m. Game Lab Lecture Intro to Video Game Design and Development with Brad Nelson Brad Nelson, independent developer of Lone Wolf, will lead a hands-on workshop that provides information on designing and developing a video game. Thursday, Oct. 25 5–9 p.m. Game Lab Workshop Lea Schönfelder — 'The Most Boring Audio Play' UCLA Game Lab visiting scholar Lea Schönfelder leads a workshop on converting a mundane topic into a wonderful story. Participants will collaborate on making a thrilling audio play from the most boring scenario imaginable. Activities will include collaborative brain storming, script-writing, voice acting and audio production. No prerequisites, everyone is welcome. For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter @UCLAnewsroom
Brenda Williams, bgwilliams@arts.ucla.edu 310-825-1969 Shilo Munk, smunk@arts.ucla.edu 310-825-6540