Jody Zellen is a Los Angeles-based artist whose practice involves digital art, painting, video art and drawing. Zellen is known for her interactive installations, public art, curated exhibitions and art criticism. She employs media-generated representations as raw material for aesthetic and social investigations that combine text and image. Zellen's artistic practice ranges from mobile apps, net art and digital animation to drawing, painting, photography and artists' books. Her fourth curated exhibition "Poetic Codings" was the nation's first touring exhibition of artists' apps.
In 2001, Zellen was awarded Java Artist of the Year and has since been commissioned to produce new works for the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, Disseny Hub Museum and the Pace University Digital Gallery. She has been commissioned to create online works for Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Austin Peay State University, turbulence.org, and artport.whitney.org. Since 1997, Zellen's work has been featured during nearly 200 media and web-art conferences around the globe, including notable digital festivals: SIGGRAPH, the 25th São Paulo Bienal, WEB Biennials in Istanbul, ISEA, File RIO and Currents-the Santa Fe International Media Festival. Composed of four artists' digital installations and mobile apps produced by eight artists, "Poetic Codings," a touring exhibition Zellen curated, opened at Los Angeles' Fellows of Contemporary Art Exhibition Space, traveled to Boston's Cyberarts Gallery and finished at the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art. Zellen's art apps for the iPad include: Time Jitters, Episodic, 4 Square, Art Swipe, Urban Rhythms and Spine Sonnet.
Solo exhibitions
Commenting on Zellen's process of photo-copying collaged texts, Susan Kandel remarked that "there is something perverse in lingering over obsolete photochemical techniques in this era of electronic ubiquity. And yet there is a certain logic as Zellen's imagery converges on the antique and the anachronistic...it is actually quite nostalgic, whether by accident or design." Zellen has had nearly forty solo exhibitions in commercial galleries, museums, university galleries and artist-run spaces, such as Carl Solway Gallery, Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, Post, Fringe Exhibitions, Printed Matter, Paul Kopeikin, Pace University Digital Gallery, Laguna Art Museum, Susanne Vielmetter Projects, Robert V. Fullerton Museum, Montgomery Gallery-Pomona College, Atlanta Center for Contemporary Art, SF Camerawork, Center for Contemporary Photography-Melbourne and Dorothy Goldeen Gallery. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at the San Jose Institute for Contemporary Art, Ben Maltz Gallery, Otis College of Art and Design, Mass MOCA, Krannert Art Museum, Santa Monica Museum of Art, Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Artists Space, University of California Riverside- California Museum of Photography, Exit Art, Robert V. Fullerton Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions.
Public art
Zellen has received public art commissions from the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs and Los Angeles MTA. These projects include banners for the Los Angeles Metro's Silver Line, custom bike racks for the City of Santa Monica, as well as posters and fences for MTA stations and a tile installation in the Emergency Drop-Off entrance to the UCLA Santa Monica Hospital.
Artist's books
Zellen's artists' books include: If, The View, Without a Trace, Imagine, ', Reliable, Untitled, To, The Blackest Spot, , Gridded Paths, , Pinspot #2, and Beneath the Ruins.
Selected bibliography
Leah Rhyne. "Now You See It: Jody Zellen Puts Viewers in Charge of her Art." Charleston City Paper. January 29, 2014. *
Dan Weiskopf. "Bodies at Play, Bodies at Work: Bob Trotman and Jody Zellen." www.burnaway.org. March 4, 2014. *
Tate Shaw. "Immersion: A Conversation with Emily McVarish, Jody Zellen and Janet Zweig." Journal of Artists' Books. Spring 2013
Jonah Brucker-Cohen. "Art in your Pocket 3: Sensor-Driven iPhone and iPad Art Apps." Rhizome. July 3, 2012.
An Xiao. "LACMA lets you play 'Exquisite Corps' on your iPhone." Hyperallergic. February 15, 2012.
Chris Funkhouser. "Case Studies 3: Poems of the web, by the web and for the web." New Directions in Digital Poetry. Continuum Press 2012.
Susan Kandel. "Art Review." Los Angeles Times. April 4, 1996. *