Laura Greig laura.greig(at)gmail.com
Exhibits
![]() Art, Design & Arduino: a Lineage 27 March 2010 @ NYC Resistor Brooklyn, NY | ![]() An Experiment (after Wright). |
| One of the things I love about working with Arduino, and these hobby electronics in general, is the feeling of building tiny worlds. Writing a computer program is an engaging puzzle, but watching something move, blink, come alive on the desk alongside that computer, and because of that program, is really quite magical. (see more photos) | |
![]() Transport: Phase II 20 February 2010 - @ Proteus Gowanus Brooklyn, NY | ![]() Installation view of Teevees Seek Analog Signal. |
| Since analog television broadcasts died last year, the only signal they've been able to find is each other's. (see more photos) | |
![]() East Wing IX: Exhibitionism 23 January 2010 - 23 June 2011 @ The Courtauld Institute London, UK | ![]() Nila (with Medina & Monica), courtesy of the photographer, Greg Niemeyer. |
Ultimately, our empathy towards Nila (ascribing human-like traits to her actions and form) is what makes her teaching so successful. Without anthropomorphizing her, viewers would have minimal desire to explore the perception of a robot. Yet, because we can think of Nila in terms of our own experience, I believe we are more willing to expand our construction of the world and accept hers. Nila reveals, to her viewers, the very structure of her robotic language. Communicating with Nila, in turn, encourages viewers to examine their relationship to technology in a rapid, wiki-world. Greig explains, “I try to show people what it’s like to try and befriend every piece of technology around. Nila tries to show people what it’s like to sit perfectly still and track the motion of light around the room.” In a fast changing world, the artist’s most important role may be to examine these connections in order to help us relate to a new reality. Nila, though she has a life of her own, still expresses Greig’s own concerns and visions of reality. A tension exists between technology and art, between our day-to-day experience and Nila’s brushwork, making Nila’s project a logical venue to navigate our own relationship to technology. -Donielle Kaufman (read the rest of the article) (see more photos) (watch a video) | |
![]() The Seduction of Duchamp: SF 9 January - 14 February 2010 @ Artzone 461 Gallery San Francisco, CA | ![]() Installation view of Hygrothermohumangraphs (Bride's Domain & Bachelor's Apparatus), courtesy of the photographer, Greg Niemeyer. |
![]() The Seduction of Duchamp 3 October - 7 November 2009 @ Slaughterhousespace Healdsburg, CA | ![]() Installation view of Hygrothermohumangraphs (Bride's Domain & Bachelor's Apparatus), courtesy of the photographer, Braden Kowitz. |
My art is an effort to help non-human intelligences make their own art. I build ramshackle robots from household hardware and hobby electronics and teach them to paint. Sometimes, as I did here for Duchamp, I work with readymade machines. I help them find a medium suited to their body. -Artist Statement (see more photos) | |
![]() What We Can Live With 15 May - 23 June 2009 @ Berkeley Art Museum Berkeley, CA | ![]() Installation view of If You Take the Time to Get to Know Me, courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage. |
Laura Greig's robots often exhibit surprising behavior while performing routine tasks. Constructed as bodies with technological organs rather than tissue, Greig's works ask that we acknowledge their presence in the same way we might confront a stranger. Particularly since her robots are media-makers, actively producing images with the same subtle variations as those produced by human arms, the onus is on us to determine their role in our rapidly growing technocracy.-Dena Beard, Curator (see more photos) | |
Statement
My art is informed by studies in engineering, epistemology, and formal logic. I like to open things up (machines, ideas, languages) to see how they work, and test their limits to see where they fall apart. My work is an attempt to unpack the art-making process using these tools.
I build robots to examine human behavior without specifically human constraints. I began with the most rudimentary visual input and output: light and paint, and got something made out of hardware store parts to paint the motion of light across the room. Even though she is simple and small, Nila shows personality and unexpected behavior and produces beautiful paintings. Working with the robots is collaborative and autonomy is frequently called into question.
Bio
Laura Greig is an American artist born in Philadelphia, 1982. She received a BA in Philosophy from Carnegie Mellon University in 2005, and an MFA in Art Practice from UC Berkeley in 2009.











