Donna J. Cox is the director of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications research and education division, the Advanced Visualization Laboratory, and the Illinois eDream (Emerging Digital Research and Education in Arts Media) Institute, and a professor in the School of Art & Design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Ellen Sandor is the founding artist and director of (art)n, cofounder of the Richard and Ellen Sandor Family Collection, and advisory board chair at the Gene Siskel Film Center at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Janine Fron is an independent game artist and researcher, cofounder of Ludica, and the creative director of (art)n.
"This is a book that can be picked up and opened to any area to
explore. If you do, you will come away a little bit wiser,
certainly more informed and totally impressed with what these women
have done." --Illinois Times "This important anthology offers
riveting testimonials to the tangible contributions of women during
the dawn of the digital era. Concentrated in the Midwest, these
scientists, inventors, designers and artists faced down gender bias
to shape the global future of technology and culture."--Sara
Diamond, President, OCAD University "It was one of the formative
periods in my life to be associated with many of the creative women
in this book. It was a magic period, when these women helped
transform the world as we knew it. I am so happy to see their
innovative work is finally getting
"New Media Futures will be a rewarding read and a prized
possession for scholars interested in the experimental, creative
spaces for art carved out by women working between the coasts. . .
. The many images from the artists’ own collections, and stories
told in their own words make this lively and engaging volume a
welcome addition to the literatures on women’s history, the
histories of computing, and the digital media arts." --Platypus
"This is a fascinating and important book. It will appeal to
scientists, technologists, artists and the general public. It tells
wonderfully exciting stories of creative, risk-taking women (and
men) that will inspire present and future generations. These
stories demonstrate that the creative spark that drives scientists
and artists knows no disciplinary boundaries. And it is simply a
delightful read."--Walter E. Massey, Chancellor, School of the Art
Institute of Chicago "New Media Futures: The Rise of Women in the
Digital Arts is poised to become a valuable study tool for those
interested in the intersection between art, women artists, and
technology." --Hyperallergic “A very necessary book that all
daughters should read." --Shannon Jackson, Associate Vice
Chancellor for the Arts and Design, University of California,
Berkeley "New Media Futures is an important and interesting work
not only because it seeks to create a history of largely
undocumented subject, the importance of women and the Midwest to
digital arts, but also because of the approach the editors take to
the work. . . . Anyone from a casual reader to an artist,
scientist, or academic may learn from and appreciate this work."
--Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society "New Media
Futures will be a rewarding read and a prized possession for
scholars interested in the experimental, creative spaces for art
carved out by women working between the coasts. . . . The many
images from the artists’ own collections, and stories told in their
own words make this lively and engaging volume a welcome addition
to the literatures on women’s history, the histories of computing,
and the digital media arts." --Platypus
"It was one of the formative periods in my life to be associated
with many of the creative women in this book. It was a magic
period, when these women helped transform the world as we knew it.
I am so happy to see their innovative work is finally getting the
attention it deserves."--Larry Smarr, Founding Director, Calit2 and
NCSA
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