Robots - Curator's Label - Clayton Bailey

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Uploaded by on Apr 4, 2008

JoAnne Northrup, Senior Curator at the San Jose Museum of Art, talks about artist Clayton Bailey, whose robot family in the SJMA Permanent Collection will be featured in the exhibition Robots: Evolution of a Cultural Icon. She talks about his influence on the exhibition and his popular robot sculptures.

For the exhibition Robots: Evolution of a Cultural Icon the San Jose Museum of Art created "Video Labels" for around the work of 6 artists. The artists are Clayton Bailey, Eric Joyner, Nemo Gould, Gail Wight, Lisa Solomon and David Pace. For each artist there is a "Curators Label", where Senior Curator JoAnne Northrup speaks about the artist, and an "Artist Label", where the artist talks about their work. Show runs April 12 - October 19, 2008.

Robots: Evolution of a Cultural Icon examines the development of robot iconography in fine art over the past 50 years. In 1920, the term robot was coined from a Czech word robota, which means tedious labor. Since then, the image and the idea of a robot have evolved remarkably from an awkward, mechanical creature to a sophisticated android with artificial intelligence and the potential for human-like consciousness. As robotic technology catches up with the wild imagination of science fiction novels, movies, and animation, dreams and fears anticipated in these stories may also become reality. Artists included in the exhibition have responded to the technological innovation with optimism, pessimism, and humor, presenting work that ultimately explores our ambivalent attitudes towards robots.

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Film & Animation

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Standard YouTube License

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  • Clayton Bailey does intelligent work, it's beautifully made with a real sense of fun. It's amusing to see Siyko (psycho?) and a few even less fortunate people fail to understand what's great about this and be so stupid as to admit it in public. Unlike Bailey, they'll never know how it must feel to have contributed something truly wonderful to civilization. I pity them.

  • Many things about this piss me off. Arranging scrap metal into something that looks like a face with arms is not "the ultimate form of recycling", nor does this have anything to do with robots, as JimTheHermit says. Also, what's this guy's old C3PO toy have to do with anything? I wonder how it must feel to make a living while contributing absolutely nothing to civilization.

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