Jules ︎ Julien

Work
  1. Nth Layer of Emotional Sediment 
  2. Angler
  3. Soft Wear
  4. Feed Me Colors
  5. Phantasm Atlas
  6. Mnemosyne
  7. Empathetic
    Topographies

Teaching & Workshops
  1. p5.js Tutorials 
  2. Critical Computation Lab
  3. Speculative Camera Filters
  4. Prototyping AR Cosmologies

Client Work Website︎︎︎

Info
  1. Julien Kris is a media artist, game designer, and creative technologist who uses software “incorrectly” to invent alternative interfaces for his body when mainstream technologies fail him. Jules’ projects have been featured at museums and festivals in the United States, including the UCLA Game Art Festival at The Hammer Museum, Indiecade Festival, Different Games Conference, LA Weekly’s Artopia, and CultureHub LA. He’s taught workshops at NYU ITP, Processing Community Day, Pepperdine University, Navel, Tiny Tech Zines, and Glendale Tech Week.
      
  2. Jules most recently worked as a Creative Technologist at Buck︎︎︎ and Part-Time Faculty at Parsons︎︎︎He is a co-organizer with Tiny Tech Zines︎︎︎.

  3. Jules holds a BA in Design Media Arts from UCLA, where he co-founded voidLab︎︎︎, an LA-based intersectional feminist collective for women, trans and queer people. Jules is an alum of the UCLA Game Lab︎︎︎.



Get in touch at hi.jules.kris@gmail.com

︎︎
Mark

Nth Layer of Emotional Sediment




A Zine Sculpture meditating on dirt, touch, and loss(iness).

Exhibited with Tiny Tech Zines for Conscious Tether: Art and the Internet in LA, as part of Getty PST ART: Art & Science Collide. Co-curated by Chandler McWilliams and Audrey Min at Human Resources Los Angeles.





Pictured left-to-right: "Query Selector" by Tyler Yin, “Nth Layer of Emotional Sediment” by Jules Kris, "The Last Few Years" by Rachel Simanjuntak, "The Oracular World" by Tristan Espinoza


Last three photos on this page by Paul Salveson

Press: 
UCLA Arts Conditional Studio Presents ‘Conscious Tether: Art and the Internet in Los Angeles’
UCLA + PST Blog: Stories and observations from UCLA events, activities and people

Mark