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Nell Tenhaaf

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Known for
  
Electronic art

Born
  
1951 (age 65–66)
Oshawa, Ontario

Education
  
Concordia, Montreal, QC

Books
  
Nell Tenhaaf: horror autotoxicus : videodisc installation, Janet Jones Dada Delirium

People also search for
  
Stuart Reid, Johanne Lamoureux, Georgiana Uhlyarik

Nell tenhaaf on cyborg


Nell Tenhaaf (born in 1951 in Oshawa, Ontario) is a Canadian, Toronto-based photographer, teacher, writer and a feminist.

Contents

Received a B.F.A. in 1974 and M.F.A. in 1989 both from Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec.

The bulk of Tenhaaf’s art was produced during the time she lived in Montreal, Quebec (since 1969); however, her work has been exhibited not only in Canada, but also in the United States and Europe.

Today Nell Tenhaaf lives in Toronto, Ontario and works as an Associate Professor in the Visual Arts department of York University.

Practice

Tenhaaf writes and makes art on subjects related to science, biotechnology and artificial life.Her practice also focuses on gender issues regarding electronic media and computer technologies as well as science exploration through art practice, keeping even the feminist works within the scientific realm in order to incorporate the female origin stories while agitating the rational locus of science. Tenhaaf includes in her work aspects that may contradict with each other such as mythology, genetics, biotechnology and even Christianity, believing that the power of art lies in the interaction between the artist, who is present in a work, and an individual viewer; in order to help the viewer identify with the work, Tenhaaf often includes material presence of a body in her pieces. In addition to this, the artist makes sure to keep the notion of agency present in her practice while also addressing the ethics.

Notable Works

The key connection between artist’s current practice and her early database work is information. Despite originally being trained in painting in 1980s, Tenhaaf was determined to get a permit from Canadian Department of Communications (DOC) to take part in the Telidon field trial which was developed by Canadian Communication Research Center (CRC) in 1970s and was considered a “second generation” database. It interested Tenhaaf because the emerging technology was hoped to have a wide commercial appreciation. Giving the opportunity, she created the database Us and/or Them (1983) which was a digital collection of text, maps, graphic design as well as images of Cold War found in various information sources such as magazines, newspapers and even United Nations reports, all of which were presented with manipulated digital graphics. This project introduced a correlation between Boolean concept of “and/or” and the harsh us vs them Cold War attitude. By combining information from both the United States and the Soviet Union origins, the controversial aspect of blame was opened. Later, Tenhaaf recreated the project as an independent show; however, until then initial Us and/or Them (1983) was accessible exclusively online at publicly available videotex terminals. This DOC-sponsored artist project was so significant due to its status as the first example of art about data realm.

After the commercial project Telidon failed in mid-eighties, Tenhaaf decided to redirect her practice closer to her starting medium (painting). She was still extremely interested in technological innovations, but at the time exploring them in artistic sphere became quite limited as well as computer-generated graphics were inaccessible without national support. Despite all the restraints, the artist still managed to include electronic technologies in her work integrating them with more traditional media such as painting and charcoal drawing. The exhibition ...believable, if not always true (1987) explored a concept of galleries and museums as archives of politically-focused information about economics of both liberalism and capitalism. The installation combined aspects of Egyptian art with popular culture innuendos in a form of bright pinks and greys. In addition to this, Tenhaaf played with the idea of placing contradictory cliches on computer screens within the space that both engaged the viewers and left them wondering about the lack of epistemological certainty. The mixture of information, technology, graphics, conundrums and mock architecture erased the obvious detachment of faith and truth, mythology and science. The artist herself explained the installation as “an interactive encounter with received ideas intended to seduce through a sense of the familiar, and yet introduce a conceptual space for resistance to acquired knowledge.” She elaborated that in this era of technological advancements that allow us to store unlimited amounts of information, the concept of knowledge become controversial. Ironically, despite our tremendous attraction to online databases and digitally-enhanced images, we are still drawn to familiar past, hence why she choose to include sacred cow and Egyptian-esque architecture exhibiting that faith is a mere foundation to all the modern innovations. Consequently, Tenhaaf explored scientific technological discourse and the absence of female form in it by familiarizing viewers to the matriarchal presence in Egyptian culture. In that database, the artist explained the importance of the Cycladic goddess, information on which was taken from the Ramses exhibition conveniently that was taking place in Montreal, Quebec at the time.

Species Life (1989) characterized the shift from information technology to biological technology in Tenhaaf’s practice. She played with the binary objections on gender by presenting digitally rectangular light boxes depicting conventional in terms of gender roles digitally enhanced images: a man and a woman looking at a picturesque sunset with a pink and blue strings of DNA spinning around them; texts from the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche and Luce Irigaray (hand-printed yet still computer-processed) climbing up the fine threads of the double helix where Irigaray’s portion was positioned to identify female position, and consequently, accentuate the role of the mother in reproduction and modern society in general while Nietzsche’s piece took place of a male position of power. By intermingling the traditional aspect of hetrosexual coupling with iconic texts of influential philosophers, Tenhaaf presented a conceptual way of describing the DNA double helix exploring the connection between romantic trope of mating and procreation and scientific discovery and its control over the reproduction. Tenhaaf’s work on biotechnology reminds us that the biology itself has its history suggesting that our contemporary concepts of biological destiny in both religious and scientific senses depends majorly on faith as well as displacement of women from a liable position. By including images of Virgin Mary and Christ in Vitro (1991) and references to the myth of Oedipus in horror autotoxicus (1992) and combining the religious ideas with scientific notions, Tenhaaf urged the viewers to realize that science doesn’t banish patriarchal and religious way of thinking, but on the contrary reinforces its power and authority.

In 1993 Nell Tenhaaf introduced her own body in her work. “I’m in a sequence of thought where the self is metaphorized. I’m engaged in my own form of experimental science, bound up with its vocabulary and imaging technologies.” (Nell Tenhaaf) Oedipal Ounce of Prevention (1993) and The solitary begets herself, keeping all eight cells (1993) were the first 2 works where the artist chose to exhibit her own human form, the former being an installation of lightboxes with the images of pierced Oedipus’ ankles and protein molecules (to reference human flesh) that hung next to images of Tenhaaf’s body presented with different medical instruments in front of it. The latter work was exhibited as a narrow 12 foot long self-portrait (exactly twice as long as the artist’s body). Both of these works reflected Tenhaaf’s fantasy of controlling her own arbitration within the scientific and cultural discourse of reproduction, proposing a conversation about women’s choice to remove or leave the 2 cells that are believed to be unnecessary in creating a complete human being, despite no ground knowledge on the subject.

Influences

Erwin Schrodinger "What Is Life"

Manuel De Landa "A Thousand Years Of Nonlinear History"

Evelyn Fox Keller "Refiguring Life"

Marcel Duchamp

John Von Neumann

Stuart Kauffman

Friedrich Nietzsche

Luce Irigaray

List Of Works

  • ...believable if not always true, 1987
  • Species Life, 1989
  • In Vitro (the perfect wound), 1991
  • horror autotoxicus, 1992
  • Homunculus,1993
  • Oedipal Ounce of Prevention, 1993
  • The solitary begets herself, keeping all eight cells, 1993
  • Apparatus for Self-Organization, 1995
  • Expression of Humours and Four-Cell Stage, 1995
  • Fit, 1995
  • Orphaned Life-Form, 1995
  • UCBM (you could be me), 1999
  • dDNA (d is for dancing), 1999
  • Swell, 2003
  • Solo

    2012

    WinWin, Paul Petro Contemporary Art /Toronto, ON

    2008

    Homeostatic, Tom Thomson Art Gallery /Owen Sound, ON

    2007

    Fit/Unfit: A Survey Exhibition, Art Gallery of Hamilton /Hamilton, ON

    2005

    Flo'nGlo, Paul Petro Contemporary Art (in Images Festival) /Toronto, ON

    2004

    Fit/Unfit: A Survey Exhibition, The Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography /Ottawa, ON and Leonard and Bina Ellen Gallery, Concordia University /Montreal, QC

    2003

    Fit/Unfit: A Survey Exhibition, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery /Oshawa, ON

    2002

    dDNA (d is for dancing) Paul Petro Contemporary Art (in flow, Images Festival of Independent Film & Video) /Toronto, ON

    2000

    The Empathy Sessions, photographs and lightboxes at Paul Petro Contemporary Art /Toronto, ON

    UCBM (You could be me), Western Front, interactive installation in Zero Degree Monstrosities event /Vancouver, BC

    1999

    dDNA (d is for dancing), storefront video projection developed on-site, MediaArts /St. Louis, MO

    UCBM (You could be me), interactive installation at Paul Petro Contemporary Art /Toronto, ON

    1997

    Neonudism, InterAccess Electronic Media Centre /Toronto, ON

    1995

    Recent works, Galerie Samuel Lallouz: lightboxes, c-prints /Montreal, QC

    1993

    Recent works, Galerie Lallouz + Watterson /Montreal, QC

    1992

    In Vitro (the perfect wound), Galerie Samuel Lallouz: lightboxes /Montreal, QC

    Horror autotoxicus, Axe N o 7: videodisc installation /Hull, QC

    1990

    Horror autotoxicus, Western Front Gallery /Vancouver, BC

    1988

    Gramatica, Galerie Oboro: slide projection installation /Montreal, QC

    1987

    Believable if not always true..., A.R.C. Gallery: installation /Toronto, ON

    Believable if not always true..., Galerie J. Yahouda-Meir /Montreal, QC

    1985

    Silence is a Monument, Galerie Powerhouse: constructions /Montreal, QC

    1982

    She was a perfect recluse, Eye Level Gallery: xerography /Halifax, NS

    1980

    Galerie Powerhouse, drawings /Montreal, QC

    1979

    Galerie Powerhouse: constructions /Montreal, QC

    1977

    Grandes illusions, Galerie Powerhouse: drawings /Montreal, QC

    Collaborations

    2001

    Quick Fix with Derrick Hodgson, Paul Petro Contemporary Art /Toronto, ON

    1996

    Myths From Cyberspace, with Sylvie B langer, Koffler Gallery /Toronto, ON

    1995

    50 ml. of Pittsburgh Air, Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, CMU art faculty exhibit, collaboration with Steve Kurtz /Pittsburgh, PA

    1994

    Nell Tenhaaf/Blair Robins, Glendon Gallery /Toronto, ON

    1990

    There's a mirror/ear at the end of my bed, SAW Gallery "Touch That Dial", collaboration with Kim Sawchuk /Ottawa, ON

    1985

    Filiation, mother-daughter show at Galerie Powerhouse, collaboration with Kay Tenhaaf /Montreal, QC

    Selected Group Shows

    2010

    thelivingeffect, Ottawa Art Gallery: Push/Pull /Ottawa, ON

    2007

    Bios 4, CAAC (Centro Andaluz de Arte Contempor neo) /Sevilla, ES

    2005

    This Must Be The Place, Interaccess Gallery with Vera Frenkel, David Rokeby, Nell Tenhaaf, Norman White /Toronto, ON

    2003

    The Bigger Picture, Ottawa Art Gallery /Ottawa, ON

    2003

    Complexity, Samuel Dorsky Museum, SUNY /New Paltz, NY and Federal Reserve Board /Washington, DC

    2002

    Digitized Bodies, Mestna Galerija /Ljubljana, SI

    2001

    Digitized Bodies, Ludwig Museum /Budapest, HU

    2000

    Intimate Perceptions, Interaccess and Zsa Zsa /Toronto, ON

    Odd Bodies, Oakville Galleries /Oakville, ON

    Dream Ecology, The Koffler Gallery /Toronto, ON and The Robert McLaughlin Gallery /Oshawa, ON

    1999

    Contemporary galleries, The solitary begets herself, keeping all eight cells, Art Gallery of Ontario /Toronto, ON

    Choice, three Canadian artists at Enkehuset Gallery /Stockholm, SE and Gallery Astly, Skinnskatteberg: UCBM

    The Body In Question, Salina Art Center /Salina, KS and KRATES Kansas touring art service circulating show

    1998

    Digital Documentary: The Need to Know and the Urge to Show, Walker Art Center /Minneapolis, MN

    Art & Science: Selected Works, Foster Gallery /Baton Rouge, LA

    Interface: Encounters with New Technology, Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography /Ottawa, ON

    1997

    LikeLife, Brighton Media Centre /Brighton, UK

    Promises of Monsters, Rockville Arts Place /Rockville, MD

    Techno-seduction, The Cooper Union /New York, NY

    1996-97

    Odd Bodies/Corps trangers, National Gallery of Canada /Ottawa, ON

    1996

    Dessins et maquettes de sculpteurs, Galerie Samuel Lallouz /Montreal, QC

    1995

    Que sont les pionni res devenues?: Centre Copie-Art - Galerie Arts Technologiques, with ISEA95 /Montreal, QC

    1994

    Le corps: Kunsthalle Bielefeld: The solitary begets herself... /Bielefeld, DE

    and Haus am Waldsee /Berlin, DE

    Le b n fice du doute: Le Sous-sol/Paris, FR

    Frankenstein: Macdonald Stewart Art Centre /Guelph, ON

    Arte Virtual: 12 Protuestas de Arte Reactivo: Horror autotoxicus /Madrid, ES

    De Causis et Tractatibus, Axe N o 7 Art Contemporain /Hull, QC

    1993

    Le b n fice du doute: Optica /Montreal, QC

    Body-guard: London Regional Art Gallery /London, ON

    Angles of Incidence: The Banff Centre for the Arts /Banff, AB

    1992

    Les Cent jours d'art contemporain, Vues d'ensemble /Montreal, QC

    1991-92

    Other Frontiers: Species Life, Third Eye Centre /Glasgow, UK; Canada House /London, UK; and Centre Culturel Canadien /Paris, FR

    1989-91

    Legitimation: Species Life, Galerie Powerhouse /Montreal, QC; Contemporary Art Gallery /Vancouver, BC; Nickle Arts Museum /Calgary, AB; London Regional Art Gallery /London, ON; and Vu /Quebec, QC

    1988

    Le Dessin Errant, Dalhousie Art Gallery /Halifax; Concordia Art Gallery /Montreal, QC and Musee du Quebec /Quebec, QC

    1987

    Siting Technology: The Walter Phillips Gallery /Banff, NS and Mackenzie Art Gallery /Regina, SK

    1986

    Women in Adverticity (Eye Revue): Union Station /Toronto, ON

    1985

    Art is Communications: A Space /Toronto, ON and Centre for Art Tapes /Halifax, NS

    Pictures of Democracy: Video Cabaret (videotex) /Toronto, ON

    Digicon 85: Arts, Sciences and Technology Centre /Toronto, ON

    Collection Pret d'Oeuvres d'art: Musee du Quebec /Quebec, QC

    1984

    TVOntario broadcast: BETA videotex magazine /Toronto, ON

    Anti-Nuke Show: Galerie Powerhouse (touring) /Montreal, QC

    The Artist as a Young Machine: Ontario Science Centre /Toronto, ON

    Artists talk about technology: ANNPAC Conference /Halifax, NSFeministe toi-meme, feministe quand meme, La Chambre Blanche /Quebec, QC

    Publications

  • With Melanie Baljko, "Sensory, sonic and symbolic features of a collaborative media art practice" in Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 37, No. 1, 2012, pp. 109–119.
  • With Melanie Baljko, "The Aesthetics of Emergence: Co-constructed Interactions" in ACM Transactions on Human-Computer Interaction (TOCHI - Special Double Issue on the Aesthetics of Interaction), Vol. 15, Issue 3, November 2008, pp. 11:1-27.
  • "Art Embodies A-Life: The VIDA Competition" in Leonardo, Vol. 41, No. 1, 2008, pp. 6–15.
  • "Where Surfaces Meet: Interviews with Stuart Kauffman, Claus Emmeche and Arantza Etxeberria" in Leonardo, Vol. 34, No. 2, 2001, pp. 115–120.
  • "As Art is Lifelike: Evolution, Art, and The Readymade" in Leonardo, Vol. 31, No. 5, 1998, pp. 397–404.
  • "Pandora Re-visited: Art and New Technologies" in Journal of Architectural Education, Washington, D.C., Summer, 1987, pp. 18–23.
  • References

    Nell Tenhaaf Wikipedia