Stern's interactive art is centered around bodily provocations, often asking his viewers to "perform" — whether publicly or privately. His pieces attempt to "get people to move in ways they normally wouldn't," and accent said movements in relation to their surroundings. His installation
enter:hektor asks participants to chase projected words with their arms and bodies in order to trigger spoken word in the space, and his subsequent piece,
stuttering, floods the interaction area with too many trigger points, pushing its viewers "not to interact." These are colored in
Photoshop, then printed on metallic paper and/or transformed into hand-made prints, using more traditional techniques. Stern's
video art tends to be in a
performative writing style, where he often plays out characters he has created, or uses
found footage from films, to explore the fragility of language. He has also worked on collaborative multimedia performances that explore similar issues, usually with more explicit political messages, such as challenging the discourse surrounding HIV/AIDS in South Africa. Stern's
interventionist projects are always
site-specific, playful and political. In his
Wireframe Series, he has volunteers from the streets of
Dubrovnik,
Croatia or
Johannesburg,
South Africa, physically erect temporary, 3D architectural structures made of rope. Each of these custom "public spaces" are "activated" only through their "contact with people," and take on different meanings in each context. In ''Doin' my Part to Lighten the Load
, Stern challenges power relations between artists and critics, and black and white — as well as electrical "power structures" — by convincing South African arts writer, and editor of Art South Africa'' magazine, Sean O'Toole, to give up electricity for 24 hours; Stern hired workers off the street to follow O'Toole around his apartment with hand-crank generators and bulbs for the evening. Stern's
Distill Life works, multimedia collaborations with
Milwaukee artist
Jessica Meuninck-Ganger that began in 2009, combine various forms of traditional
printmaking with
video and
machinima. Here the artists "mount translucent prints and drawings on top of video monitors, which appear to bring moving images to life on paper." According to Chris Roper of South Africa's
Mail and Guardian, "The work is funny, pretty and accessible, but it’s also complicated, surprising, exceedingly well crafted and rewards a long-term relationship." The works pay homage to and cite a number of artists, including
Diego Velázquez,
Katsushika Hokusai,
Eadweard Muybridge,
Claude Monet,
Jan van Eyck,
William Kentridge,
Utagawa Hiroshige and others. Stern's
Second Life-based
mixed reality art work explores "the juxtaposition of old and new media and illuminates the possibilities and limitations of both."
Given Time enacts a permanent "connection between two simulated people staring wordlessly at each other across real space." According to John Mitchell, Stern uses "Second Life as a medium much like oil paint or marble, hand-drawing two Second Life avatars and pulling them from out of their universe and into ours. In the gallery, they exist on two large screens facing each other, and the viewer may only encounter them by walking between the screens." The piece directly references both the book
Given Time by
Jacques Derrida, and the artwork
Untitled (Perfect Lovers) by
Félix González-Torres. Wikipedia editors determined its intent was nonetheless in violation of site rules, and it was deleted within 15 hours of its initial posting. The resulting controversy received national coverage, including an article in
The Wall Street Journal. The
Wikimedia Foundation later claimed Stern and Kildall had infringed on the Wikipedia trademark with their own website, wikipediaart.org. The artists publicly released a letter they received in March 2009 from a law firm requesting that they turn over their domain name to Wikipedia.
Mike Godwin, then the foundation's legal counsel, later stated that they would not pursue any further legal action. Mary Louise Schumacher of
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel compared the incident to the "outrage inspired by
Marcel Duchamp's urinal or
Andy Warhol's
Brillo Boxes." Yale research fellow Claire Gordon called the article an example of the "feedback loop" of "Wikipedia’s totalizing claims to knowledge" in a 2011
Huffington Post report.
Wikipedia Art was included in the Internet Pavilion of the
Venice Biennale for 2009. In 2011, it appeared in a revised form at the
Transmediale festival in Berlin, where it was an award finalist.
Tweets in Space In 2012, Stern and Kildall again partnered on a project called
Tweets In Space, inviting participants to submit tweets to be transmitted to the planet
GJ 667Cc, whose conditions scientists believe may be capable of supporting life. The transmission is scheduled to take place in September 2012 at the
International Symposium on Electronic Art in
Albuquerque,
New Mexico. Stern and Kildall used
RocketHub to fundraise the money needed to access a transmitter capable of reaching the planet. In addition, code developed for the project is planned for release to
open source. According to Stern and Kildall, the goal of
Tweets In Space is to activate "a potent conversation about communication and life that traverses beyond our borders or understanding." ==Exhibitions==