Ken Goldberg: bio (art)

Ken Goldberg

Ken Goldberg is an artist and professor of engineering at UC Berkeley, where he is Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media. Goldberg's art installations such as the Telegarden have been exhibited at the Whitney Biennial, Venice Biennale, Pompidou Center (Paris), Walker Art Center, Ars Electronica (Linz Austria), ZKM (Karlsruhe), ICC Biennale (Tokyo), Kwangju Biennale (Seoul), Artists Space, and The Kitchen (New York). Goldberg is Founding Director of Berkeley's Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium and has held visiting positions at San Francisco Art Institute, MIT Media Lab, and Pasadena Art Center. The Tribe, a short film he co-wrote with his wife Tiffany Shlain, was selected for over 100 film festivals including Sundance, Tribeca, and Rotterdam. Ballet Mori, a multi-media project he developed to commemorate the 1906 Earthquake, was performed by the SF Ballet at the San Francisco Opera House.

Goldberg is an IEEE Fellow and Vice President of Technical Activities for the Robotics and Automation Society. He holds a PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University; he and his students have published over 150 research papers and six US patents on robotics, automation, and geometric algorithms. Goldberg is editor of several books, including The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet (MIT Press, 2000). Goldberg was awarded the National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award in 1994, the NSF Presidential Faculty Fellowship in 1995, the Joseph Engelberger Robotics Award in 2000, the IEEE Major Educational Innovation Award in 2001.

Goldberg is represented by the Catharine Clark Gallery in San Francisco.

Links to artworks can be found at: http://goldberg.berkeley.edu/art

goldberg@berkeley.edu