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04. Adam Brandejs @ PPCA for Nuit Blanche - Sept 30 (NB)
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Adam Brandejs "Genpets"
Friday September 30, 2006
7pm - 7am
as part of Nuit Blanche
Paul Petro Contemporary Art is pleased to present "Genpets" by
Toronto-based artist Adam Brandejs. This installation will appear
in the front windows at 980 Queen St West for the weekend. The
reception for this work will be held at our Multiples + Small Works
location at 962 Queen St West.
"Genpets are the perfect bio-engineered buddy for the 21 century!
A series of pre-packaged bio-engineered pets perfectly suited to the
ever-increasingly busy lifestyle of the modern consumer."
You can learn more about these 'bio-engineered buddies' by visiting
Adam's web site: http://www.genpets.com
Adam Brandejs is a recent graduate of the Ontario College of Art and
Design. Using hybrid media he explores and questions current social
issues. Since it's creation during his tenure at OCAD "Genpets" has
been exhiibited on several occasions including this year's Art Basel.
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Paul Petro Contemporary Art
980 Queen St. W.
Toronto, Ontario
M6J 1H1
tel: 416-979-7874
fax: 416-979-3390
info@paulpetro.com
gallery hours: wed-sat 11-5pm
http://www.paulpetro.com
I was floored by this article, so here it is posted online. Thank you so much Frank for your kind words.
Tech-savvy sculptor says pet project is satire
By Frank bentayou, Plain Dealer Reporter
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Edition: Final, Section: Arts & Life, Page E1 Zone All
ART
Would you love to have a cuddly little creature around the house but aren't keen on 5 a.m. dog walks, cat-litter patrol or the cold stare of a tropical lizard?
Consider Genpets, the latest no-fuss, bioengineered domestic life forms.
You can learn about these trademarked, "prepackaged . . . living, breathing genetic animals," as promotional material calls them, by calling up www.genpets.com.
But, first, a confession: Genpets aren't what they seem and aren't really alive.
They're part of an art installation, a creation of Canadian sculptor and Web designer Adam Brandejs, and owe less to the burgeoning science of bioengineering than to an ancient tradition that art often must take a role in satirizing, criticizing, even mocking features of human behavior that defy survival, integrity and plain old good sense.
These faux life forms are actually molded plastic figures that Brandejs and his girlfriend, Crystal Pallister, packed with robotic devices that make the dolls' chests heave and monitors blink within their plastic packages.
A hope underlying satire is that it might awaken viewers to some new awareness. Brandejs' Genpets are weird, even creepy, but seem to carry a message about the limits of tampering with life for commercial purposes.
The 24-year-old artist, fresh out of Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto, already is receiving worldwide attention through his thought-provoking art installations. And, in fact, Genpets is part of one of the most original sculptural, electronic and conceptual artworks you can find on the Internet - or anywhere else.
In part, it focuses on one of the most bizarre ideas of 2006: living pets "engineered" from the DNA of various life forms (apparently, including humans), alive and hibernating, stocked on retail shelves and programmed to bond with whoever buys and awakens them and to be trouble-free for their new owners.
Brandejs said people have responded in droves, with anywhere from 5,000 to more than a million discreet hits per day on the Web site. Visitors send often-scathing e-mails.
Some have seen the elaborate display as an ethically outrageous effort that renegade scientists cooked up to commercialize bioengineering. Others have groused that the phenomenon is nothing more than a sleazy hoax designed to sell ugly rubber dolls.
"It's neither," Brandejs said. He's not selling his models via Genpets.com, and they certainly are not alive.
He conceived of and created Genpets as his art-school thesis, but he enjoyed the concept so much, he kept working on it. "It went a little overboard," he said.
Overboard? The Web site links to convincing published articles, scientific details and graphics as well as to "product" features (each package includes a heart monitor to show that the pet is "alive"), a bogus online store selling accessories and "nutrient packs," and even a 20-page catalog aimed at recruiting wholesalers and investors.
Brandejs has shown his installation - including packaged Genpets hanging from a retail display rack, Web site, multimedia presentations and artifacts - at galleries around Canada.
The work most recently hit Basel, Switzerland. All the attention drew interest to
his earlier student work. Exhibits are scheduled in Hamburg, Germany; Toronto,
and New York this fall.
The modest artist acknowledges a strain of edgy, deadpan satire. (An online portfolio at www.brandejs.ca shows more of his work.) Packaged pets, for example, are available in pre-programmed one- or three-year life-span models, depending on buyer preference.
That seems a grimly witty commentary on how people may want pets, but not the long-term responsibilities they often demand.
"I have a definite interest in materialism and consumer culture," Brandejs said. And he prefers "dealing with issues that we like to sweep under the carpet."
Genpets' issues include the dark implications of bioengineering at the service of modern convenience, "but also how animals are already treated in pet stores and factory farms. They've become a consumable good," Brandejs said.
He received no grants or other support for his student works. Instead, he financed materials and months of toil with jobs as a Web developer/designer.
The source of his inspiration? "It would be impossible to ignore issues such as technology and convenience, as art must reflect the times," Brandejs said.
Caption:
PHOTOGRAPHS BY ADAM BRANDEJS Artist Adam Brandejs'
attention to commercial details focuses the sharp satire of his Genpets
installation on ethical questions regarding both bio- engineering and the
treatment of animals.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY ADAM BRANDEJS Toronto artist
Adam Brandejs created 19 robotic Genpets for his art installation by that name,
each packaged with a blinking heart monitor and pulsing apparatus to make it
appear as if it's breathing. "The Web site is part of the installation," he
says. "But actually to see the installation in a gallery, with all these little
guys breathing, is kind of creepy."
My roommate Ben Dickerson was the first assistant editor as well as titler (? He did the titles… what’s that called? He’s out right now..can't ask him) on the film Sharkwater that was playing at the Toronto International Film Festival.
If you missed Sharkwater, Alliance Atlantis will be distributing it across select theatres in North America soon.
I found it to be an amazing film because it breaks down the myth of sharks as 'killers'.
I think the quote "more people are killed by pop machines a year than by sharks" or, if that’s not good, more people die from acne, than from sharks says a lot.
People kill sharks, not the other way around. Shark hunting and killing for fins is insane, and sharks ARE needed to keep the underwater ecosystem in balance.
Check it out, you’ll find it interesting.
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Opening Party
The other week we also went to the opening party for the film at Century Room here in Toronto. Not the sort of place I’d normally go as I’m not a coked out full of myself sort of guy, but it was fun the one night (though 50% of attendants were coked out). The drinks were of course all free, and the sharkwater cocktails had glow sticks in them.
So like any group of mid 20’s guys and gals, not looking to shindig it with industry hypes, we got tanked on free booze.


Haven't updated in awhile, been too busy.
Finished the Film shoot with Ania and Nichola. They hired me to do prosthetics for a short film where Shawn (the actor) unzips his stomach and washes his intestines in the sink. Its pretty looking, can't wait to see the final film. It's a short of course.
I made a zipper prosthetic, intestines, as well as a full fake chest for close ups.
I'll add a full portfolio entry with more photos later at some point when I get more photos back. Till then, teaser.
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Oh, and I also wrote a full image upload system for my site from scratch. No more opening photoshop, doing a crop, etc, uploading via ftp.. coded a nice little upload system that does all the work for me. Makes journal entries a lot easier!! ;) Just click the images above to enlarge.
(126) Total entries in journal
// Finland 2003
"That was when I realized. I asked myself could some of what these people be talking about actually be dangerous? And the best thing I can do is stay close to them, track what they are interested in and either hack it or try to confuse the spaces in which they operate". - Rob Van Kranenburg