
Personal page:
benfry.com
Workshop 1 (Information Visualization with
Processing), Saturday March 7, 10am-1pm.
Workshop 2 (Information Visualization with
Processing), Saturday March 7, 2pm-5pm.
Lecture:
Sunday March 8, afternoon session.
Ben Fry received his doctoral degree from the Aesthetics +
Computation Group at the MIT Media Laboratory, where his research
focused on combining fields such as Computer Science, Statistics,
Graphic Design, and Data Visualization as a means for understanding
complex data. After completing his thesis, he spent time developing
tools for visualization of genetic data as a postdoc with Eric
Lander at the Eli & Edythe L. Broad Insitute of MIT &
Harvard. During the 2006-2007 school year, Ben was the Nierenberg
Chair of Design for the the Carnegie Mellon School of Design. At
the end of 2007, he finished the book
Visualizing
Data for O'Reilly. He currently works as a designer in
Cambridge, MA.
With Casey Reas of UCLA,
he currently develops
Processing, an open source programming environment for
teaching computational design and sketching interactive media
software that won a Golden Nica from the Prix Ars Electronica in
2005. In 2006, Fry received a New Media Fellowship from the
Rockefeller Foundation to support the project. Processing was also
featured in the 2006 Cooper-Hewitt Design Triennial. In 2007, Reas
and Fry published
Processing: A Programming Handbook for
Visual Designers and Artists with MIT Press.
His personal work has shown at the Whitney Biennial in 2002 and the
Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial in 2003. Other pieces have appeared
in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, at Ars Electronica in
Linz, Austria and in the films "Minority Report" and "The Hulk."
His information graphics have also illustrated articles for the
journal Nature, New York Magazine, Seed, and Communications of the
ACM.