IMC Expo Speakers    
 
<<
   

Luke DuBois

Jaanis Garancs

Natalie Jeremijenko

Konyk Architecture - Craig Konyk

MUSE Corp - Mark Lewis & Matthew Guelke

Derek Lomas

Paul D. Miller (aka DJ Spooky) & Guest Panelists

Michael Naimark

W. Bradford Paley & Judith S. Donath Information Esthetics Lecture Series One (second lecture)

Red Octane - Charles Huang

Kathleen Ruiz

Clay Shirky

Virtools - Virgile Delporte

Other Speakers

Joan Soler-Adillon

Michal Bril

Dennis Crowley

Jon Goldstein

Jean-Marc Gauthier

Dana Karwas

Miro Kirov

Matthias Lehmann

Dimitri Negroponte

Houston Riley

Sonali Sridhar

Matthew Suttor

Meghan Trainor

James Tunick

Shawn Van Avery


W. Bradford Paley

Saturday, April 16th

3PM-4PM Keynote Panel: The Humanist Interface- New Paradigms in Social Software & Data Visualization with Natalie Jeremijenko, Derek Lomas, W. Bradford Paley, & Clay Shirky

Thursday, April 21st

6PM Happily co-located within the IMC EXPO is the Information Esthetics Lecture Series One with W. Bradford Paley and Judith S. Donath

This lecture series is happily co-located with the IMC
EXPO in the Chelsea Art Museum. Our attendees are invited to hear Dr. Judith Donath, Director of the Sociable Media Group at the MIT Media Lab speak, and participate in an interview/chat with Dr. Donath and W. Bradford Paley afterwards.

http://InformationEsthetics.org

Bio

W. Bradford Paley uses computers to create visual displays with the goal of making readable, clear, and engaging expressions of complex data. His visual representations are inspired by the calm, richly layered information in natural scenes. His process applies three perspectives: [1] rendering methods used by fine artists and graphic artists are [2] informed by their possible underpinnings in human perception, then [3] applied to creating narrowly-scoped, almost idiosyncratic representations whose visual semantics are often driven by the real-world metaphors of the experts who know the domains best. Brad did his first computer graphics in 1973, graduated Phi Beta Kappa from UC Berkeley in 1981, founded Digital Image Design Incorporated (didi.com/brad) in 1982, and started doing financial & statistical data visualization in 1986. He has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art; he created TextArc.org; he is in the ARTPORT collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art; has received multiple grants and awards for both art and design, and his designs are at work every day in the hands of brokers on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. He is an adjunct associate professor at Columbia University, and is director of Information Esthetics: a fledgling interdisciplinary group exploring the creation and interpretation of data representations that are both readable and esthetically satisfying.


 
   
© STUDIO IMC 2005
 
http://www.STUDIOIMC.com