Nancy Paterson, ca. 2006. Image from "Shifting Polarities: Exemplary Works of Canadian Electronic Media Art Produced Between 1970 and 1991" by Dr. Caroline Langill.
Nancy Evelyn Paterson (1957–2018) was a Canadian artist and writer known for her work in new media.[1][2][3]
She was an associate professor at the Ontario College of Art and Design University from 1990 to 2018, and was Facilities Coordinator at Charles Street Video, a non-profit, artist-run centre providing production and post-production facilities for digital video and audio.[4][5]
Paterson was considered an important contributor to the cyberfeminist movement[6][7][8] and to the discussion of the role of gender in electronically mediated experience.[9][10]
Paterson was also known for her electronically-based artworks. Her 1998 work Stock Market Skirt connected the physical height of a skirt hemline with the real-time movement of the stock market.[10][11] Her 1989 work Bicycle TV placed the viewer on a bicycle facing a video screen as the viewer cycled, then controlled their movement through scenes of the Canadian landscape projected before them.[12][13][14]
Paterson curated the group show Disembodied at InterAccess Gallery in Toronto in 1997, which was one of the earliest exhibitions in Canada to include an online component.