In and out of the Body and into the Machine with Chico MacMurtrie
Mon Feb 25, 2019
6:30 PM
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Chico MacMurtries work pushes the boundaries between robotic sculpture, new media installation, and performance. Immersed in the Bay Areas art and technology counterculture of the 1990s, he became known for his anthropomorphic, computer-controlled sculptures, which evolved over the years into a society of machines. Today, operating out of his studio in Brooklyn, 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 nonorganic bodies. Freestanding or suspended in midair, these more recent servo-pneumatic soft machines inflate and deflate through an articulated series of movements, depicting imaginary molecular and cellular formations on a magnified scale. MacMurtrie is currently working on the Border Crossers, a series of inflatable robotic sculptures designed to rise several stories high and arch over the USMexico border and other borders around the world. Their choreographed performance would originate on both sides of the border and stage a symbolic gesture of unity and peace.
For more information, visit artsdesign.berkeley.edu.