Przemyslaw J. Moskal (Poland)

Przemyslaw J. Moskal
http://www.laksom.com

participant in
“Celebrate!” – 10 Years JavaMuseum – Forum for Internet Technology in Contemporary Art

Przemyslaw J. Moskal holds a position of Assistant Professor at Canisius College in Buffalo, NY where he is a faculty member of the Digital Media Arts Program in the Communication Studies Department. From 2005-08 Moskal was an adjunct faculty at East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania at the Department of Media Communication and Technology. Moved to the U.S. from Poland in 1990. In 2003 he graduated with Master of Professional Studies degree from Tisch School of the Arts, New York University and began his career as new media artist and consultant for a variety of non-profit and commercial projects. Moskal received grants from New York State Council on the Arts and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council for his project Virtual and Real: K-Dron and Light. In 2004 he participated in New New Yorkers Festival in Warsaw, Poland during which he presented his interactive art works at the Zacheta National Gallery of Art in an exhibition sponsored by the American Embassy in Warsaw and co-organized with the Warsaw Electronic Festival. In 2004 Moskal was invited by an award winning design studio, Local Projects, to design and program interactive 3D component for The ChronoScope, an interactive installation which was on view at AXA Gallery in Times Square as part of an exhibition entitled: At The Crossroads of Desire: A Times Square Centennial. In 2005 The ChronoScope received Honorable Mention Award from I.D. Magazine Annual Design Review in interactive category. His interactive, digital art works, which are both screen based and installations have been recognized and exhibited at: Tisch School of the Art, New York University, U.S.; Cité des Sciences et de l’Industrie, France; Cornerhouse Gallery, UK; SIGGRAPH 2004 U.S.; Hypersonica 2004, Brazil; Conservatoire d’Art et d’Histoire, France; iDMAa Conference USA; Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center, U.S.; among others.