Open Screen 2022

Open Screen is arebyte’s yearly worldwide open call for artists working online that self identify as disabled.

Developed in partnership with Shape Arts, the initiative aims to address an area of underrepresentation in the art industry, with works exploring the role of digital technologies and the new opportunities it creates or hinders. The open call welcomes artists who use digital tools to their advantage to overcome barriers, criticise matters of inclusivity within technology, or everything in between.

For the 2nd iteration of Open Screen, 75 artists have entered the open call launched in January 2022 with digital work responding to arebyte’s 2022 curatorial theme Sci-Fi.

The three artists selected by the 2022 judging panel to present their work in Open Screen 2022 are Milad Forouzandeh (IR), Natalee Decker (US) and MH Sarkis (UK).

Judging Panel 2022

Elinor Hayes
Creative Producer at Shape Arts
Joseph Wilk
Programmer and Live Coding Performer
Vivek Gohil
Gaming Accessibility Consultant
and Freelance Writer at Eurogamer
Nimrod Vardi
Founder & Creative Director, arebyte
Rebecca Edwards
Curator, arebyte

 
 

Natalee Decker
CRIP FANTASY

Natalee Decker, Orange Rollator, 2021 

CRIP FANTASY is a collection of digital work about assistive technologies and the bodies which employ them. Within this project, Natalee uses 3D rendering to convey newly re-constructed devices that break away from the typical design rhetoric of sterility, medicalization and pity-inducing. By employing Fantasy and Science-Fiction, Natalee cultivates a space for re-imagined mobility devices untethered by the realities of a body, attitudes, gravity and material. View Natalee’s work here.

MH Sarkis
PΛNΛCΞΛ

Still from PΛNΛCΞΛ, 2020 - ongoing.

PΛNΛCΞΛ is an experimental short film that blends CGI and real imagery into a post-apocalyptic vision of a speculative Levantine future, incorporating a dystopian cityscape lined with historically-loaded billboards and “physiographies” that seamlessly integrate geographical features within metaphorical spaces. This project ultimately aims to provoke a feeling of catharsis by connecting with viewers and spreading awareness of the unrest and history of Levantine. View MH’s work here.

Milad Forouzandeh
Prologue_version_01

Still from Prologue_version_01, 2020

Prologue_version_01 creates a new ecosystem, in both a virtual and the real world that includes trans-humans, plants and animals with upgraded genomes and new capabilities. The project questions how one would distinguish between the performances of these organisms and investigates whether these imagined creatures would affect the meaning of our future literature, Poetry, and Stories. View Milad’s work here.

 
 

Natalee Decker

Natalee Decker (they/them) is a Chicago born Los Angeles based artist currently pursuing an undergraduate degree at the University of California, Los Angeles in Design|Media Arts and Disability Studies. Via a multidisciplinary practice, they investigate disability aesthetics, technology, and crip fantasy. Their recent work utilizes 3D computer graphics to creatively reimagine the mobility devices – walkers, scooters, wheelchairs, canes – they use each day, imbuing them with fluid impractical form, vivid celebratory color, and questions about desirability. Along with artist Cielo Saucedo they are creating a web archive of digital disabled embodiment using motion capture and 3D modeling software. This project relies on collaboration to create custom “terms of use,” challenging issues of safety, exclusion, and exploitation of disabled people in digital space. In 2020, Natalee helped form the UCLA Disabled Student Union working towards better equity and access on campus. They are passionate about mutual aid, social justice, and love. Natalee is a white, disabled, non-binary queer.


MH Sarkis

MH Sarkis (b. 1990) is a London-based mixed new media artist who is a 2021 graduate of the Goldsmiths Masters of Fine Art Programme and recipient of the 2021 Almacantar prize. Sarkis’s work has appeared in more than a dozen solo and group exhibitions across Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. Her art has been featured in the Saatchi Art Contemporary Surrealists collection, and appeared in the 2018 Shape Open showcase.

Through a blend of traditional mediums, CGI, film, responsive robotics, and machine learning, MH Sarkis's work seeks to explore female experience, relational dynamics, and applications of soft power within frameworks of potential posthumanisms and techno-protopias. Her latest projects, such as PΛNΛCΞΛ, exemplify these concerns while highlighting the importance of interactivity to her creative process – the works are not only physically shaped and re-arranged in real time based on audience responses, these interactions and their data serve to inform Sarkis's future creations, as well, creating a sort of “genetic memory” that expresses itself in each new piece.

Milad Forouzandeh

Milad Forouzandeh ( M i l a d . j p g ) was born and raised in Shiraz, Iran. He graduated in 2012 with a BA in visual communications from Shiraz Art Institute of Higher Education, with an approach in digital and new media art, where he also acted as a teachers’ assistant. In 2010, he won the title of top young Iranian visual artist. His works have been nominated and selected in biennales and events in Shangyuan Art Museum, Tate Britain, MUNCH Museum, Hard Disk Museum, 30 Seconds Museum Tokyo, The Wrong New Digital Art Biennale, NODE Forum for Digital Arts, CADAF contemporary and digital art fair, Art Dubai 2021 and etc. In 2014, Miald founded the “Dar-Al-Hokoomeh Project” with Mohsen Hazrati, an independent new media art project based in Shiraz with a vision to create a community dedicated to emerging artistic practices, workshops, talks, presentations, and exhibitions. In 2016, Milad began lecturing as an assistant professor in his alma mater, teaching Digital Arts courses. In 2017, Milad was invited as one of the guest speakers on the “Mollasadra St” episode of TEDx video series. 

Shape Arts

Shape Arts is a disability-led arts organisation which works to improve access to culture for disabled people by providing opportunities for disabled artists, training cultural institutions to be more open to disabled people, and through running participatory arts and development programmes.