MoMA Virtual Tour – Video Games and Interactive Art (Zoom)

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Program Type:

Lecture

Age Group:

Adults, Seniors
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Program Description

Event Details

Join us online for a look at the exhibit Never Alone: Video Games and Other Interactive Design at the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art. There will be a prerecorded video tour of the exhibit given by its curators followed by a Q&A session with a MoMA guide.

Hosted on Zoom. Free and open to all. Register here: https://forms.gle/HcrsSNmJUFSBSqo97.

The Zoom Link will be sent twice before the program.

This program will not be recorded.

This program is a collaboration between Scarsdale Public Library, Warner Library, Greenburgh Public Library, Pound Ridge Public Library, and Lewisboro Library.

About The Exhibit:

As our devices like to remind us, we spend a huge portion of our lives in digital worlds. The interfaces we use to access them—from Zoom to FaceTime, WhatsApp to Discord, Roblox to Fortnite—are visual and tactile manifestations of code that both connect and separate us and shape the way we behave and perceive others. Yet like other ubiquitous tools, interfaces are seldom recognized as design. This exhibition brings together notable examples of interaction design, a field that considers the points of contact between objects—whether machines, apps, or entire infrastructures—and people.

The exhibition, drawn from work in MoMA’s collection, ranges from the iconic and universal @ sign, a symbol dating back to the Middle Ages, to an ad hoc device that allows a graffiti artist with ALS to tag city walls from their bed. Games range from global staples such as Tetris and Pac-Man to immersive explorations of the natural world, like Flower, or records of indigenous traditions and culture, like Never Alone, to forays into the absurd like Everything Is Going to Be OK. These works remind us that while the digital realm has different, and often untested, rules of engagement, interaction design can transform our behaviors—from the way we experience and move our bodies to the ways we conceive of space, time, and relationships.

This exhibit was originally designed by Paola Antonelli – MoMA’s senior curator in the Department of Architecture and Design – and by Paul Galloway – the collection specialist in the Department of Architecture and Design.