Mailing List


Orit Gat
Orit Gat is a writer living in London. She is a contributing editor of The White Review.


Articles Available Online


On Marriage, Netflix, and Other Things I Hate

Book Review

June 2023

Orit Gat

Book Review

June 2023

1. ‘It’s kind of crazy to shop at Target, watch Netflix, drive a Honda, and still have a husband.’   Marriage falls into a...

Book Review

July 2022

It’s Personal: Writing and Reading Through Grief

Orit Gat

Book Review

July 2022

1. A spill  I’m drinking coffee in bed and reading The Reactor. I feel so close to everything Nick...

Lines of varying thickness rotate on black On the screen beside, tilted away from the first, is a slide show, a still image from the moving one every ten seconds This is not a video work; generated in real time, the digital image doesn’t run on a loop It could go on forever   http://vimeocom/32451215# P-1271 series, 2006-2007 Manfred Mohr’s solo exhibition at Carroll/Fletcher, his first in London, is presented as a concise survey of fifty years of practice Logics run off each other; visualisations generated by an algorithm determine the maximum limits of a printed panel on the opposite wall; signs from an alphabet are drafted onto each other and scaled up, made manifest in lacquered steel, and fixed to the wall   Mohr was living and working in Paris in the 1960s, where he started making generative drawings at The Meteorological Institute (he has lived in New York since 1981) At the time only scientists and mathematicians had access to new computer technologies At issue now is the ubiquity of computer technology There’s been a lot of discussion around the New Aesthetic over the past year or so; the technological mistake evidences our new way of seeing No longer hidden away in research institutions, the computer is now embedded in our working lives, our means of communication and making In the 1960s computer technology belonged to military research; its use signaled the corruption of art   Mohr’s website details various ‘work phases’ Some are paradigms of post-war art: action painting, use of black and white, geometric experiments, hard edge painting, colour Others seem betray a commitment to science and mathematics: systematisation of picture content, sequential computer drawings, fixed structures, 4-D hypercube, graph theory, dissection of cube, quasi-organic growth programs on the cube, 6-D hypercube It occurs to me that the language of art is just as peculiar as that of science It’s clear these terms stand in for large bodies of work, work as in labour, learning, but also working out, working through It is only when I meet Mohr that I realise this is a peculiar language all of his own     http://youtube/j4M28FEJFF8

Contributor

August 2014

Orit Gat

Contributor

August 2014

Orit Gat is a writer living in London. She is a contributing editor of The White Review.

Essay

September 2020

Three Finals

Orit Gat

Essay

September 2020

1998   In the summer of 2006, at a bar off Odéon, a girl I didn’t know drew a...

Anna Wiener’s ‘Uncanny Valley’

Book Review

February 2020

Orit Gat

Book Review

February 2020

1. SF vs NY   Anna Wiener found herself in the right place at the right time. That is, if that was what she...
James Bridle’s ‘New Dark Age’

Book Review

October 2018

Orit Gat

Book Review

October 2018

Halfway through James Bridle’s foreboding, at times terrifying, but ultimately motivating account of our technological present, he recounts a scene from a magazine article...
Women and Technology: History is a Cautionary Tale

Book Review

April 2018

Orit Gat

Book Review

April 2018

Few book reviews open with amateur rap, but: ‘back in the day when new media was new,’ goes the first line of a song...
Scroll, Skim, Stare

feature

Issue No. 16

Orit Gat

feature

Issue No. 16

1.   This is an essay about contemporary art that includes no examples. It includes no examples because its subject – artists’ websites, their...
What Can an Art Magazine Be?

feature

Issue No. 10

Orit Gat

feature

Issue No. 10

What can an art magazine be? Today, as the publishing industry reassesses its role in the age of the internet, the pioneering art magazine Metronome provides...

READ NEXT

poetry

August 2013

To the Woman

Adam Seelig

poetry

August 2013

poetry

June 2011

Malcolm Starke Died Today

Kit Buchan

poetry

June 2011

Malcolm Starke died today who rang us most nights so late that it could only be him. He’d been...

fiction

May 2013

Cabbage Butterflies

Ryū Murakami

TR. Ralph McCarthy

fiction

May 2013

The guy looked disappointed when he saw me. My one sales point is that I’m young, but my eyelids...

 

Get our newsletter

 

* indicates required