“Design Life Now” at the ICA, Tom Sachs, Steve Miller, and “Women Artists of India” at Brandeis
By RANDI HOPKINS | September 18, 2007
 Joseph Ayers, “First-Generation Biomimetic Underwater Ambulatory Robot (Robolobster)” |
| “Design Life Now: National Design Triennial” at Institute of Contemporary Art, 100 Northern Ave, Boston | September 28–January 6 | 617.478.3100 | “Tom Sachs: Logjam” and “Steve Miller: Spiraling Inward” at Rose Art Museum, 415 South St, Waltham | September 25–December 16 | 781.736.3434 | “Tiger by the Tail! Women Artists of India Transforming Culture” at Kniznick Gallery, Women’s Studies Research Center and Mildred Lee Gallery, Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham | October 2–December 14 | 781.736.8102 |
Robolobster, an underwater crustacean with eight plastic legs, fiberoptic antennae, and an industrial-strength plastic shell, is a groundbreaking example of the new science of biomimicry, which seeks to develop technological solutions to the many problems of landlubbers by mimicking biological organisms and processes. Robolobster, for instance, can explore the ocean floor and report back on objects like mines. Invented by Dr. Joseph Ayers, a marine biologist and neuroscientist at Northeastern University, this gleaming denizen of the ocean blue takes a star turn as one of more than 80 featured objects in “DESIGN LIFE NOW: NATIONAL DESIGN TRIENNIAL” which opens at the Institute of Contemporary Art on September 28. The exhibition showcases outstanding work — all created in the past three years — in product design, architecture, furniture, film, graphics, new technologies, animation, science, and fashion. Trends include technology’s growing interest in emulating the natural world (Robolobster, and also Nike’s Free running shoe, which simulates the natural motion of bare toes) and a renewed appreciation of hand-crafted and do-it-yourself design, something that’s evident in the popularity of items from FlatPak prefab housing to Readymade magazine.No stranger to commercial design, Tom Sachs has been examining — and remaking — objects from the world of consumer culture and the public domain for more than 15 years. Opening at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University on September 25, “TOM SACHS: LOGJAM” offers 12 installations that provide insight into the artist’s working process; they include a handmade working refrigerator complete with beer and a functioning toilet and sink with toilet-paper dispenser. Also opening at the Rose on September 25, “STEVE MILLER: SPIRALING INWARD” is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition in the US. Miller has been working with Nobel Laureate Rod MacKinnon to translate MacKinnon’s research in biochemistry into visual images; he creates painterly links between Picasso and Warhol and contemporary laboratory imaging techniques.
Opening on October 2 in the Rose Art Museum’s Mildred Lee Gallery and in the Kniznick Gallery at Brandeis’s Women’s Studies Research Center, “TIGER BY THE TAIL! WOMEN ARTISTS OF INDIA TRANSFORMING CULTURE” has painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, and video art by 17 artists whose work addresses social and cultural issues experienced by contemporary Indian women. Public programs in support of the exhibition include an International Symposium on October 2 and 3, a “Women Filmmakers from India” film series beginning October 11, and a trip to Northern India scheduled for January 2008.
On the Web
Institute of Contemporary Art: www.icaboston.org
Rose Art Museum: www.brandeis.edu/rose
Brandeis University: www.brandeis.edu/centers/wsrc/arts
Related:
Brandeis shutters art museum, Tempo tantrum, Turn on the bright lights, More
- Brandeis shutters art museum
Late Monday afternoon, Brandeis University informed leaders of its Rose Art Museum that it would close the institution this summer and auction off the more than 6000 pieces in its renowned collection, which includes major works by Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jasper Johns.
- Tempo tantrum
In 2008, the fourth dimension, time, steps to the fore in the art world.
- Turn on the bright lights
Art this fall grapples with issues like gender and journalism, personal space and human survival, and what to have for lunch.
- Dollhouses and dream states
Autumn highlights in the museums and the galleries.
- It's a shandeh!
The news that Brandeis University plans to shutter its highly regarded Rose Art Museum and sell its exemplary collection of American art from the 1960s and '70s in order to resolve its budget crisis not only shocked the world of elite higher education, it also stunned the local, national, and international arts communities.
- Will Brandeis sell out the Rose?
Will Brandeis take the money and run?
- I spy
Artist Julia Scher was way ahead of the Homeland Security gang’s obsession with electronic eavesdropping and video voyeurism, having made high-tech installations that allowed museum and gallery goers to watch each other watching each other since the late 1980s.
- Will Brandeis lose its swagger?
Ethnomusicologically invigorated Brandeis students and alumni are hoping for an outburst of criticism for the probable downsizing of Wayne Marshall.
- Brandeis President Jehuda Reinharz steps down
Fallout from Bernie Madoff's titanic scheme is still unfolding, as was made clear on this week's 60 Minutes report about the search for billions bilked by the New York Ponzi king.
- Wizards and masterpieces
At “Harry Potter: The Exhibition” at the Museum of Science, when a robed attendant places the sorting hat on a visitor’s head and soon after a door whooshes open to reveal the Hogwarts Express, you find yourself filled with the kind of giddy expectation you feel when getting your hands on a Potter book the day it’s released.
- Hand made
Eight years after Loïs Mailou Jones’s death, School of the Museum of Fine Arts curator Joanna Soltan is proclaiming her to be “among the most significant African-American artists of the 20th century.”
- Less

Topics:
Museum And Gallery
, Science and Technology, Special Interest Groups, Sciences, More
, Science and Technology, Special Interest Groups, Sciences, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Northeastern University, Visual Arts, Institute of Contemporary Art, Cultural Institutions and Parks, Museums, Women's Issues, Less