Esther Polak

Dutch artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Esther Polak (born 1962) is a Dutch visual artist. She is active in the new media field and was one of the first artists to experiment with GPS. Since 2010, Polak has worked full-time with Ivar van Bekkum as an artist duo PolakVanBekkum. She lives and works in Amsterdam.

Esther Polak at the RealTime project during the opening of Made in Amsterdam - 100 years in 100 works of art at the Amsterdam Museum.

Career

Esther Polak studied painting at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague (1981-1986) and then mixed media at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam (1986-1989).

Her interest lies in capturing movement in a landscape. Polak gained notoriety with her "locative media" projects, such as Amsterdam RealTime (collaboration with Waag Society and Jeroen Kee),[1] MILKproject[2] (collaboration with researcher Ieva Auzina and RIXC) and NomadicMILK. These projects use GPS to arrive at a contemporary landscape representation.[3]

In addition to using GPS, Google Earth as an artistic medium plays a vital role in her video work. Unlike other 3D worlds, Google Earth represents a 1-to-1 relationship with the world as we know it, and this representation also carries a political, social, and economic reality.[4] Video works using Google Earth include A Collision of Sorts (2017), Going To Be/Go Move Be (2018) and The Ride/The Ride (2019).

Works

  • 2019 The Ride/The Ride (installation/film)[5]
  • 2019 Pendulum (Performance)[6]
  • 2018 Going To Be/Go Move Be (film)[7]
  • 2017 A Collision of Sorts (short film)[8]
  • 2016 The Mailman's Bag (installation/film)[9]
  • 2008-present Spiral Drawing Sunrise (performance)[10]
  • 2007-2009 NomadicMILK[11]
  • 2004-2005 MILKproject[12]
  • 2002 Amsterdam RealTime[13]

Awards and nominations

  • 2017 Nomination Golden Calf for A Collision of Sorts[14]
  • 2016 Special Mention 2Annas FF[15]
  • 2016 Expanded Media Preis Network Culture
  • 2015 Nomination Academy Award for Astronomy and Art[16]
  • 2005 Golden Nica Interactive Art, Prix Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria[17]
  • 2004 Gada Balva art prize, Riga, Latvia

References

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