Artist Interview: Zach Lieberman
April 11, 2017, 00:00
Artist, researcher and hacker Zachary Lieberman, winner of the 2017 Eyebeam Award, shares his thoughts on how technology can be a form of liberating expression.

Technology Should Be In Service of Poetry
Zachary Lieberman is an Eyebeam Alum from 2002, 2007 and 2008. He is also a winner of a 2017 Eyebeam Award. Lieberman is an artist, researcher and hacker with a simple goal: he wants you surprised. In his work, he creates performances and installations that take human gesture as input and amplify them in different ways -- making drawings come to life, imagining what the voice might look like if we could see it, transforming people's silhouettes into music. He's been listed as one of Fast Company's Most Creative People and his projects have won the Golden Nica from Ars Electronica, Interactive Design of the Year from Design Museum London as well as listed in Time Magazine's Best Inventions of the Year. He creates artwork through writing software and is a co-creator of openFrameworks, an open source C++ toolkit for creative coding and helped co-found the School for Poetic Computation, a school examining the lyrical possibilities of code. _______________________________________________ What are some of the projects that you are most proud of? openFrameworks is an open source c++ toolkit for creative coding I helped create to share work I was doing professionally with collaborators like Golan Levin. We were using a library of code from MIT, called ACU, which wasn’t open source—it was used heavily at the MIT Media lab and was a precursor to processing—and OF was an attempt to make something similar. I remember vividly the first time I bumped into a stranger who was using openFrameworks—it was a lesson that ideas spread, and that the more open you are, the more people you can reach. openFrameworks has taken years to develop and grow. It’s a different timescale, almost like farming, versus projects you might do in weeks or months. Zach Lieberman's video art — showcased at the Annual Eyebeam Awards ceremony held on April 6, 2017 The School for Poetic Computation, a school I started with several friends like former Eyebeam resident Taeyoon Choi, came out of a frustration with traditional higher education and a desire for alternative education for more diverse and experimental practices in art and technology. Now in it’s fourth year, it’s been really magical to see this whole community form around things we are passionate about. It’s got a “field of dreams” quality to me. “If you build it they will come.” It was a reminder that the world is hungry for new ideas, new schools, new tools, new approaches. The eyewriter was a phenomenal project to be involved with. A group of Eyebeam alumni joined forces to work with an artist named Tempt. Tempt’s an old school graffiti artist who is completely paralyzed. We build an open source, open hardware tool that helped allow him to draw graffiti again using his eye movements. It was a reminder that art has the power to heal and that assistive technology can also form part of an artistic practice.


