Praba Pilar

  • Prenada de lo Posible Performance at Mills College, Oakland, California
  • World Brain Disorder Performance at Carnegie-Mellon University; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Computers Are A Girl\'s Best Friend Performance at the Museum of World Cultures, Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Cyborg Soap Opera Performance at 21 Grand, Oakland, California
  • Church of Nano Bio Info Cogno Performance at the Sonoma County Museum, Santa Rosa, California
  • We Remember The Sun 9/11/1973 Performance at the San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, California
  • Computers Are A Girl\'s Best Friend Performance at ISEA/Zero One Festival of Arts on the Edge, San Jose, California
  • Church of Nano Bio Info Cogno Performance at Center for the Arts at Yerba Buena, San Francisco, California

 

Bay Area/Colombian Praba Pilar is a performance artist, technologist and cultural theorist exploring aspects of emerging technologies which generate new forms of economic, environmental and sexual exploitation and erasure.  Deeply rooted in Latino communities, she has spent the last decade presenting site works performances, street theatre, writing and websites which provide a counternarrative to the overarching rhetoric about the beneficence of biotechnology, information technology, and nanotechnology.

 

Ms. Pilar is currently presenting her latest techno-obra performatica:  BOT I. Influenced by the work of Samuel Beckett titled NOT I, and by Isaac Asimov’s I ROBOT, Pilar draws from these two texts to create a contemporary situated analysis of anxiety in the technosphere. From 2006-2011 Ms. Pilar has been presenting the Church of Nano Bio Info Cogno, a satiric multi media intervention into the messianic rapture surrounding the singularity and other effects of the technology revolution, at Center for the Arts at Yerba Buena, UC Irvine, the Radical Philosophy Association and multiple universities and performance spaces. Recent work has focused on the effects of information and communication technologies on women around the world. She has recently exhibited work from a series titled Cyber.Labia, which is an extended “cyber-talk” on gender, race and technologies. This series has culminated in digital prints and an artbook of interviews with cyberworkers and theorists, scripts, images and a companion DVD. Over 2004-06 Ms. Pilar toured her solo performance, Computers Are A Girl’s Best Friend to Sweden, Montreal, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle and Albany. This performance counters the sexiness of the computer industry by disrobing the truth of the exportation of toxic electronic waste to Asia; net based gyno-slavery; net based trafficking, telesexuality; Real Dolls and other extraordinary aspects of the computer revolution.

 

Ms. Pilar has performed at The LAB, Galeria de la Raza, the SF Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of the African Diaspora, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Studio XX and the Darling Foundry in Montreal, the Museum of World Culture in Sweden, and public streets and universities around the United States. She has participated in panel presentations organized by Teknica Radika, the Museum of Contemporary Art of Chicago, The SF Museum of Modern Art, Critical Resistance, the Living Word Festival, the Media Alliance and several universities and galleries locally and around the country. Her work has been featured in MIT’s “Race in Digital Space” Conference and in UC Santa Cruz’s Social Change Across BordersConference.

 

Ms. Pilar is currently in a doctoral program at UC Davis in Performance Studies, with designated emphases in Studies in Performance Practice and in Feminist Theory and Research, and is the recent recipient of the UC Davis President’s Pre-Doctoral Award (2007-2011), a Puffin Foundation Grant (2004), the Creative Capital Foundation Award (2002), Zellerbach Family Fund Award (2002), the Potrero Nuevo Fund Prize of New Langton Arts (2001) and the Creative Work Fund Grant (2000).  She recently completed a Master Residency with MacArthur Fellow Pepon Osorio (2000) at MACLA San Jose, and was featured in a book on inspirational women by Cathleen Rountree, On Women Turning Thirty: Making Choices, Finding Meaning (2000).