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Daniel Canogar - Scrawl
Technique: Generative animation, screen, computer.
Artist Biography: Daniel Canogar is a Spanish contemporary artist born in Madrid in 1964. He is known for his work at the intersection of art, technology and science, exploring the relationship between humans and technology through multimedia installations.Canogar graduated in Fine Arts from the Complutense University of Madrid in 1985, and in 1989 moved to New York to continue his studies at Pratt Institute, where he specialized in photography and video. In the 1990s he began working on multimedia installations, using video projections and screens to create works that engaged the viewer in an interactive dialogue.Throughout his career, Canogar has exhibited his work in galleries and museums around the world, including the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid, the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Sevilla, and the Denver Museum of Contemporary Art in the United States. He has also worked on several public projects, such as the permanent installation "Wave" at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina.One of Canogar's best-known works is "Assault," a 2005 installation consisting of a giant LED screen suspended in the air, showing a series of moving images taken from scenes in action films. The work was exhibited in the group exhibition "Infinite Painting" at the Sofia Museum of Contemporary Art in 2012.In addition to his work in the visual arts, Canogar has also been a professor at the European University of Madrid and has collaborated with several technology companies on research and development projects. In 2014, he was awarded Spain's National Electronic Art Award for his contribution to the discipline of digital art.Digital work. Variable dimensions. Screen not included. Daniel Canogar presents his new work, Scrawl, at ARCO 2023. In recent years, social networks have radically changed the way we communicate. What was initially perceived as a democratization of hegemonic media narratives - controlled by a minority - are now seen as the main drivers of post-truth. Twitter is a particularly radical platform in its content, with less strict censorship policies and, therefore, more raw content. This condition makes it a perfect breeding ground for channeling frustrations, contemporary concerns and radical conspiracies, a dissonant collective voice that sometimes operates in the form of a wave where a text of less than 280 characters can reach viral and global level dissemination. Scrawl is a generative digital piece that reacts to Twitter trends in real time. The software of the piece periodically collects the most mentioned topics in the Twitter community. These issues are translated in real time into an aesthetic of vandalism and denunciation graffiti that, unlike professional graffiti, are done quickly and anonymously, anonymously. anonymously, often because of the harshness or sincerity of its content, other times as a simple gesture of self-enunciation. As a work in constant change, Scrawl attempts to capture the multiple forces and tensions that cohabit in social spaces such as Twitter, where the identity of individuals -always escorted by the screen- is explored in its rawest and, paradoxically, perhaps most real and honest version. The rhythm of Scrawl imitates the succession of layers applied on the urban wall, where the graffiti texts are periodically covered by flat layers of paint, creating in turn a new canvas for a new succession of graffiti. A pulse is generated between the individual citizen's desire to communicate and the institutional and the institutional cleanliness that erases and "cleans" the chaotic graffiti world. The result is an algorithmic work with an automatic poetics that constantly slips between the aesthetics of social protest and abstract painting.
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