She earned a MPS from NYU’s ITP program, a BA from Yonsei University, and is an alum of the School for Poetic Computation. She has received Tisch’s Future Imagination Collaboratory Fellowship, Mana Contemporary’s New Media Program residency, ITP's Research and Teaching Fellowships, Engelberg Center’s Arts Fellowship, and iF Design Concept Award. Song is currently a member of the New Museum’s NEW INC program and teaches at the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. During her MAD residency, she will expand upon her ongoing project, Invisible Sculptures, which suggests more inclusive and creative views of the world through non-visual experiences that activate olfactory, auditory, and tactile senses. Her work combines computational technologies and the organic nature of craft materials to create unique aesthetics and experiences. MAD 2021 Artist Studios resident Yeseul Song creates experimental sculptures, interactive installations, digital sketches, and performances that examine the fluid nature of human perception and its relationship to society, culture, and the environment. I invited the public to engage with the sculpture and met a lot of people that I wouldn’t have met if my work was in traditional gallery or museum spaces. I brought this cart out to the streets and my neighborhood parks. I put together a cart that can carry the sculpture. I decided to bring my work to public spaces by myself. During the pandemic, it became challenging to show work in indoor spaces. The Internet was not an alternative space for my work because of its highly experiential nature. Invisible Sculptures is a series of sculptures that are invisible to the eye and can only be “seen” by engaging senses other than vision. The “visible” sculptures made by the participants will become a collective perception of the invisible sculpture, celebrating individual differences and diversity of human perceptions while questioning the idea of “normal” and “truth.” Will everyone see the same sculpture? ARTIST STATEMENT: INVISIBLE SCULPTURES Participants also will be invited to make clay versions of the sculpture. A receipt for a piece of 'invisible art' was auctioned off in Paris for nearly 1.2 million. As the sound changes, visitors sense the boundaries of the sculpture’s form. Visitors can perceive the sculpture through sound feedback that responds to their hand gestures and movement. Invisible Sculpture on Wheels is an experiential, multi-sensory sculpture that isn’t visually discernible, yet has a spatial form and occupies space. I have thousands of projects and sketches that I want to do.Can an art object be “seen” by senses other than vision? Join us at Central Park’s Maine Monument and discover the surprising ways all of our senses contribute to our experience and understanding of art during an interactive demonstration of Yeseul Song’s Invisible Sculpture on Wheels. I like to do abstract art works and I am inspired by sculptors like Constantin Brancusi, Amadeo Modigliani and Pablo Picasso. Now I dedicate myself to making paintings, casting bronze works and my new passion, making aluminum sculptures. Currently, I am a member of the Association of Spanish Sculptors and Painters (AEPE), and I participate in contests and shared exhibitions. In 2004, I had a personal exhibition of paintings in Madrid, at the Manolo Rojas gallery, in the Salamanca district. Here I expanded my studies by doing a master's degree in web design and graphic design. Shortly after finishing university, I moved to Madrid, Spain. how to see the forms in their three dimensions. There I learned the fundamental bases for sculpture, such as techniques, materials, molds, human anatomy. I specialized in sculpture with the famous sculptor Nenko Marov, and Professor Stefan Lazarov, founder of glyptic portraits in Bulgaria. A very tough university, where I learned that 1% is talent and 99% is work. Later I entered the “Saints Cyril and Methodius” university in Veliko Tarnovo, the ancient capital of Bulgaria. There, with the help of the teachers, I made a personal exhibition of watercolors, and I won a contest in South Africa with the work "The launches in the Danube". I finished high school in an institute specialized in art. From him I learned a lot about the foundations of art composition, colors, perspective, techniques. Since I was little I started to go to painting classes from the famous Bulgarian painter Ivan Manoilov. I was born in 1975 in Bulgaria, in the small town of Lom, which is located on the bank of the Danube River.
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