2007 Koehn Colloquium: Sherry Turkle

Koehn Colloquia - CyberintimaciesAbout “Cyberintimacies”
Sherry Turkle, a leading scholar in the study of human psychology, is the distinguished lecturer of the 2007 Koehn Colloquium, a program of the University of Oregon School of Architecture and Allied Arts. Professor Turkle has applied her skill to the inquiry of human interaction with technologies and the changing perceptions of human-machine relationships. Recent years have seen the development of computational entities – Turkle calls them relational artifacts – some of them are software agents and some of them are robots – that present themselves as having states of mind that are affected by their interactions with human beings. These are objects designed to impress not so much through their “smarts” as through their sociability, their capacity to draw people into cyberintimacy.

This presentation comments on their emerging role in our psychological, spiritual and moral lives. They are poised to be the new “uncanny” in the culture of computing – something known of old and long familiar – yet become strangely unfamiliar. As uncanny objects, they are evocative. They compel us to ask such questions as, “What kinds of relationships are appropriate to have with machines?” And more generally, “What is a relationship?”

Download/Stream Audio and Watch the Video at:
http://aaa.uoregon.edu/podcast/index.cfm?mode=koehn&id=39

Visiting Artist: Donald Morgan. Nov. 29, 2007 @ 7:30PM. 177 Lawrence Hall.

Donald Morgan received his BFA in painting from the University of Oregon in 1993 and his MFA from the Art Center College of Design in 2001 where he concentrated in painting and sculpture. While at the University Oregon he was a fellow at the Yale Norfolk painting program. He presently divides his time between Eugene and Los Angeles, where he is a sculpture lecturer at UCLA.His work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Art Examiner, and Art Forum.

Visiting Artist: Donald Morgan

Of his recent work which transitions from painting to sculpture, Morgan says:

As a result of reading a great deal about Antarctic expeditions I began to organize my sculptures around the categories pertinent to the scientific pursuits of those expeditions. Namely, the technological, botanical, geological and zoological. However, these categories provided a flexible framework or jumping off point rather than a rigid blueprint from which to begin making things. Indeed, much of my work fits awkwardly, or not at all, into these categories. While my work is affected by the aesthetic behind the ordering and categorization having to do with natural history, it is also heavily shaped by having been a furniture maker and by my experiences in nature.

CRYPTIC STUDIOS is visiting A&AA!

There will be a luncheon and portfolio review. Great networking opportunity and to find out about the gaming graphics industry as well as some tips to strengthen your own skills!

Cryptic Studios is a leading independent developer of Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games, with a reputation for delivering profitable, on-time, on-budget titles. It developed the innovative and successful City of Heroes, as well as its subsequent expansion, City of Villains. Both titles garnered numerous awards from leading enthusiast press including GameSpy’s Game of the Year award in 2004.

For more information about cryptic studios check out their website:
http://crypticstudios.com/