|
In my work as an artist, curator, and cultural organizer, I have focused on developing a critical understanding of the complex and interdependent relationships between art, media technology, and politics.
Overview | Research | Grants/Awards | Teaching | Publications
Mark Tribe is an artist and occasional curator whose interests include art, technology, media theory, and politics. His art work has been exhibited at G-MK (Zagreb) Ronald Feldman Gallery (New York City), LACE (Los Angeles), the DeCordova Biennial (Lincoln, MA), and the National Center for Contemporary Art (Moscow). He has organized curatorial projects for the New Museum of Contemporary Art, MASS MoCA, and inSite_05. Tribe is the author of two books, The Port Huron Project: Reenactments of New Left Protest Speeches (Charta, 2010) and New Media Art (Taschen, 2006), and numerous articles. He has lectured at UC Berkeley, Goldsmiths, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, MIT, and Harvard. He is Assistant Professor of Modern Culture and Media Studies at Brown University, where he teaches courses on radical media, the art of curating, open-source culture, digital art, and techniques of surveillance. In 1996, Tribe founded Rhizome, an organization that supports the creation, presentation, preservation, and critique of emerging artistic practices that engage technology. He received a MFA in Visual Art from the University of California, San Diego in 1994 and a BA in Visual Art from Brown University in 1990.
|
![]() MARK TRIBE, M.F.A., University of California, San Diego, 1994. A.B., Brown University, 1990. http://research.brown.edu/myresearch/Mark_Tribe On The Web: Brown Wiki (Research, Teaching, and other Resources) Portfolio Site Are you Mark Tribe? Click here to edit your research profile. |