Nigerian American visual artist and academic
Mimi Ọnụọha is a Nigerian American visual artist and academic based in Brooklyn , NY whose work examines the effect of data collection and technology on society.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
Early life and education
Ọnụọha was born in 1989 in Parma, Italy,[ 4] and grew up in Houston, Texas.[ 5] Ọnụọha majored in anthropology[ 6] at Princeton University .[ 7] She earned a Master’s degree from NYU ’s Interactive Telecommunications Program.[ 8]
Work
Ọnụọha's work, including The Library of Missing Datasets, [ 9] has explored the idea of "missing datasets," which she describes as "blank holes in otherwise data-saturated systems," such as information about citizen surveillance by the police. These gaps in modern data collection can both harm and help vulnerable communities.[ 6] Ọnụọha points out that Google Maps lacks map data for Brazil's favelas , leaving out communities where more than a million people live.[ 10] She is also interested in the effects of artificial intelligence and how people are classified and abstracted by data.[ 6] Ọnụọha is the co-author of A People's Guide to Tech with Mother Cyborg .[ 11] , an artist-led organization that creates educational guides in the form of zines and hosts workshops about emerging technology.[ 12] She previously taught at Bennington College .[ 7] Based in Brooklyn,[ 6] she is currently an adjunct professor at New York University .[ 1]
Exhibitions
Ọnụọha's recent solo exhibitions include bitforms gallery [ 13] and Forest City Gallery .[ 14] Her work has been featured at the Whitney Museum of Art , the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art ,[ 15] Mao Jihong Arts Foundation , La Gaitê Lyrique , Transmediale Festival , The Photographers Gallery ,[ 16] and NEON .[ 17] Her public art engagements have been supported by Akademie der Kunst , Le Centre Pompidou , the Royal College of Art , the Rockefeller Foundation , and Princeton University .
Awards and Recognition
Ọnụọha has been a Fulbright-National Geographic Fellow and an artist in residence at Eyebeam Center for Art & Technology, Studio XX, Data & Society Research Institute, Columbia University ’s Tow Center , and the Royal College of Art .[ 18]
Writing
Ọnụọha has written articles in publications such as Quartz ,[ 19] [ 20] [ 21] FiveThirtyEight ,[ 22] the Knight Foundation,[ 23] and National Geographic .[ 24] [ 25] [ 26] She has also written essays published in The Are.na Annual, FiveThirtyEight , and Nichons-Nous Dans L'Internet.
References
^ a b "Mimi Onuoha" . Data & Society . Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ Reventlow, Nani Jansen. "Data collection is not the solution for Europe's racism problem" . www.aljazeera.com . Retrieved December 30, 2020 .
^ "Center for Digital Humanities holds 'Who Counts?' symposium on intersectional data" . Princeton University . Retrieved December 30, 2020 .
^ "With Mimi Onuoha" . Eyebeam . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "Making audacious bets on the future of technology: Media artist Mimi Onuoha '11 shines a light into the invisible margins of data | Princeton Alumni" . alumni.princeton.edu . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ a b c d "Advice to my younger self: Mimi Onuoha" . Ford Foundation . February 12, 2019. Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ a b "Mimi Onuoha | Bennington College" . www.bennington.edu . Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ "Mimi Onuoha | Tow Center" . towcenter.columbia.edu . Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ "The Library of Missing Datasets" . Alfalfa Studio . July 31, 2018. Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ Rosenblat, Alex (October 23, 2018). Uberland: How Algorithms Are Rewriting the Rules of Work . Univ of California Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-0-520-97063-2 .
^ "A People's Guide to AI" . Allied Media Projects . September 18, 2018. Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ "A People's Guide to Tech" . A People's Guide to Tech . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ gallery, bitforms. "Mimi Onuoha, Everything That Didn't Fit" . bitforms gallery . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ info1509366 (October 27, 2021). "These Networks In Our Skin" . Forest City Gallery . Retrieved September 18, 2024 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ "Mimi Ọnụọha: What is data?" . ACCA . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "Mimi Onuoha - The Future Is Here! | The Photographers Gallery" . thephotographersgallery.org.uk . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "HER DATA" . NEON . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "Reenvisioning the Internet: Embrace Its Multiplicity" . walkerart.org . Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
^ Onuoha, Mimi (June 6, 2017). "Side-by-side images expose a glitch in Google's maps" . Quartz . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ Onuoha, Mimi (May 10, 2017). "You probably are not fully removing your private photos and data before selling your old technology" . Quartz . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ Onuoha, Mimi (April 19, 2017). "Machine learning is being used to uncover the mass graves of Mexico's missing" . Quartz . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ Onuoha, Mimi (January 30, 2017). "What It Takes To Truly Delete Data" . FiveThirtyEight . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "On art and technology: The power of creating our own worlds" . Knight Foundation . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "You Are Not Your Data (and a project update)" . news.nationalgeographic.org . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "It Matters Most To You: On Digital Literacy and Data Production" . news.nationalgeographic.org . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
^ "What Maps Really Show" . news.nationalgeographic.org . Retrieved September 18, 2024 .
External links