Julianne Pierce is an Australian new media artist, curator, art critic, writer, and arts administrator. She was a member of the groundbreaking group VNS Matrix.[1] She went on to become a founding member of the Old Boys Network, another important cyberfeminist organisation.[2] She has served as executive director of the Australian Dance Theatre[3] and is Chair of the Emerging and Experimental Arts Strategy Panel for the Australia Council. Pierce was executive director of the Australian Network for Art and Technology (ANAT) from 2000 to 2005,[4] based in Adelaide, and was Executive Producer of Blast Theory[3] from 2007 to 2012, based in Brighton in the UK.

Julianne Pierce
Occupation(s)New media artist and arts administrator

On cyberfeminism edit

As documented in Hawthorne and Klein's 1999 book Cyberfeminism, VNS Matrix is often credited with inventing the term cyberfeminism and Pierce argues that the term emerged spontaneously in a number of places at once.[5]

Julianne Pierce is a regular commentator on the early work of VNS Matrix and cyberfeminism new media art. "Cyberfeminism was about ideas, irony, appropriation and hands-on skilling up in the data terrain. It combined a utopic vision of corrupting patriarchy with an unbounded enthusiasm for the new tools of technology. It embraced gender and identity politics, allowing fluid and non-gendered identities to flourish through the digital medium. The post-corporeal female would be an online frontier woman, creating our own virtual worlds and colonising the amorphous world of cyberspace."[6]

Curated works edit

References edit

  1. ^ Judy Malloy (2003). Women, Art, and Technology. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-13424-8.
  2. ^ "old boys network 01". www.obn.org. Old Boys Network. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Julianne Pierce : Australian Dance Theatre". adt.org.au. Archived from the original on 1 May 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e "T_P_S Curators". performancespace.com.au. Archived from the original on 18 February 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  5. ^ Susan Hawthorne; Renate Klein (1999). Cyberfeminism: Connectivity, Critique and Creativity. Spinifex Press. ISBN 978-1-875559-68-8.
  6. ^ Maria Fernandez; Faith Wilding (2002). "Situating Cyberfeminisms" (PDF). Domain Errors: Cyberfeminist Practices: 17–28. Retrieved 2 February 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Pierce, Julianne. "Info heavy cyber babe." First Cyberfeminist International Reader, Hamburg: Old Boys Network (1998).
  • Pierce, Julianne. "Australian new media: an active circuit." Artlink 21.3 (2001): 14.
  • Pierce, Julianne. "Guest Editorial: New Media-New Collaborations." Dance Forum. Vol. 15. No. 2. Australian Dance Council, 2005.
  • Tofts, Darren. "Writing media art into (and out of) history." Re: live: 161.