Startups

Meet the winning artists making interactive installations for #BIW16

We issued a call for tech-art mashups and are happy to announce the two cutting-edge projects that will be on display at Sept. 30's Innovation Celebration.

The installations will be displayed in MICA's Brown Center during #BIW16's closing party. (Photo courtesy of MICA)

One of the main purposes of Baltimore Innovation Week 2016 presented by 14 West is to give everyone the opportunity to participate in showing off Baltimore’s technology community.
Plus, we heard you loud and clear at the Help Plan BIW event back in June — that you guys wanted to see more STEAM represented during the week.
We answered the call for more tech-art mashups with a modest microgrant program to fund creative installations as a part of our Innovation Celebration and Baltimore Innovation Awards ceremony at MICA’s Brown Center on Sept. 30. (We announced the call for applications back in August.)
Today we’re proud to announce this year’s #BIW16 microgrant recipients, along with brief descriptions to give you an idea of what they’re using the funding for.

Grand Prize Winner

Pinkston will begin the first phase of her project, LandMarked, at Baltimore Innovation Week. LandMarked is an exploration of the architectural objects that we call monuments. This project is about unearthing stories that are unheard about landmarks, monuments and the spaces that are publicly and privately declared sacred. For this project, this is the underlying question: What would a monument for the people look like? 
Pinkston will host a space for conversations with city residents about the relationship that physical structures have to slavery and other historical narratives. These conversations will occur inside a specially made LandMarked conversation booth in the MICA building during the Innovation Celebration. 
Each conversation will be documented with video and audio recordings. All documentation from the event will be part of the LandMarked project website and later used for a soundtrack that will accompany a “choreo-poem” that will be performed at the city’s confederate monuments.

Runner Up

Gangwisch’s work focuses on public interaction as an essential input to an aesthetic algorithm, managing a conversation between the organic observer and the digital subject. He experiments with alternative methods of documenting, informing and manipulating an ostensibly objective reality.
The Creature series, currently in development, uses face- and body-recognition to generate procedural interactions between the public and digital pseudo-organisms. Gangwisch will use his surroundings to manipulate images of Innovation Awards guests on the the wall of the MICA building in this interactive installation. Get ready for your close up!

###

And just because we don’t want anyone to miss these awesome installations due to the cost of a ticket, we’ve decided to raffle off a pair to some real STEAM fans!
There are two ways to win:

Make sure to browse through all of the 50+ events scheduled for the week while you’re building out your personalized schedule on the Baltimore Innovation Awards website.

Companies: Technical.ly
34% to our goal! $25,000

Before you go...

To keep our site paywall-free, we’re launching a campaign to raise $25,000 by the end of the year. We believe information about entrepreneurs and tech should be accessible to everyone and your support helps make that happen, because journalism costs money.

Can we count on you? Your contribution to the Technical.ly Journalism Fund is tax-deductible.

Donate Today
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Congress votes to reauthorize the EDA, marking a historic bipartisan effort to invest in innovation and job creation

Looking for a job? This strategy turns NotebookLM into your personal hiring coach

Technically Media