Tamiko Thiel | |
---|---|
Born | June 15, 1957 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Academy of Fine Arts Munich |
Known for | Public art, new media, virtual reality, augmented reality |
Website | www.tamikothiel.com |
Tamiko Thiel (born June 15, 1957) is an American artist, known for her digital art. Her work often explores "the interplay of place, space, the body and cultural identity,"[1] and uses augmented reality (AR) as her platform. Thiel is based in Munich, Germany.[2]
Tamiko Thiel was born June 15, 1957, in Oakland, California, and raised in Seattle, Washington.[3][4] She is the daughter of Midori Kono Thiel, a Japanese-American calligrapher,[2] and Philip Thiel, a German-American.[4] Thiel attended Stanford University and graduated with a B.S. degree in Product Design in 1979.[5] She went on to receive her M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1983 from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[6] There, she studied human-machine design at the school's Biomechanics Lab and computer graphics at the precursors to the Media Lab. In 1991, Thiel received her Diploma in Applied Graphics, specializing in video installation art, from the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich, Germany.[7]
Thiel's first career was in product design, working at Hewlett-Packard in the Data Terminals Division. She later worked at Thinking Machines Corporation with Danny Hillis, Richard Feynman and Brewster Kahle, heading the design team that created the boolean n-cube hypercube chassis that defined the Connection Machine CM-1 and CM-2 supercomputers' appearance.[8]
From November 1994 to February 1996, she worked for Starbright World as the creative director and producer of the initial system for the Starbright World project, working closely with Steven Spielberg, to create an online interactive 3D virtual world for seriously ill children.
Thiel has had many other exhibits, some of the most notable being her shows "Beyond Manzanar" (a piece about a World War II-era Japanese-American internment camp in California), "The Travels of Mariko Horo", and "Shades of Absence".
She is one of the founding members of Manifest.AR, a group of artists focused on augmented reality, with which she staged spontaneous interventions at Corcoran Gallery of Art in 2013, Tate Modern in 2012, the Venice Biennial in 2011, and Museum of Modern Art (New York City) in 2010.[9]
Her work is included in various permanent museum collections, including the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA),[10] San Jose Museum of Art,[11] and many others.
Thiel's artwork for the last 15 years has focused on "site specific virtual reality installations".[12] Her work has been displayed in international venues including the International Center of Photography, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Corcoran Gallery of Art, ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Ars Electronica, SIGGRAPH conferences, ISEA International, and others.[13] Thiel's artwork often utilizes augmented reality (AR) as a platform, and uses Layar, an augmented reality viewer. Thiel's works have been layered over locations such as the New York Stock Exchange, the Tate Museum in London,[14] New York's Museum of Modern Art,[15][16] the Berlin Wall,[12] Piazza San Marco in Venice, and many other locations.
Beyond Manzanar is a large scale, immersive, virtual reality (VR) artwork Thiel co-created in 2000 with Iranian-American artist, Zara Houshmand.[17][11] The technology located you inside the Manzanar, the known site of one of the ten American concentration camps, where more than 120,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II.[18] As you walk around and explore the camp, you physically constrained by the landscape and features, emphasizing the emotional feelings of confinement.[18]
This work is part of the permanent collection at the San Jose Museum of Art and was part of the 2019 exhibition, Almost Human: Digital Art from the Permanent Collection.[11]
Clouding Green was a 2012 augmented reality (AR) installation taking place in various locations in Silicon Valley and in San Francisco.[19] The installation showed animated clouds looming over many major Silicon Valley corporations, the color of the clouds ranged from ashy black to bright green depending on their usage of renewable energy.
In 2018–2019, a commissioned and collaborative work with artist /p,[20] Unexpected Growth an augmented reality (AR) installation was part of exhibition Programmed: Rules, Codes, and Choreographies in Art, 1965–2018 at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.[19] Unexpected Growth was site specific to the sixth floor terrace of the museum, showing coral growing on the building alongside small trash and slowly bleaching color over the span of one day.[19]
As of November 2020, Thiel is working with microbiologist Luisa I. Falcón on an AR/VR project related to microbialites and stromatolites in Lake Bacalar (or Laguna Bacalar) in Quintana Roo, Mexico, funded by Goethe-Institut.[21]