TY - JOUR AU - Shaskevich, Helena AB - Despite her status as an unpaid “resident visitor” for most of her nearly two-decade tenure there, Lillian Schwartz created some of the most important works of early computer art at Bell Labs. This essay unravels the conceptual frameworks of “vision” as they manifest in Schwartz’s early computer films made between 1970 and 1972, with a specific emphasis on vision as “information” and “data.” It argues that these specific films in Schwartz’s oeuvre explored a newly emerging model of vision based on the rendering practices of computers and scientific instruments, while navigating the fraught question of the role of the embodied viewer. Resisting this rationalized order of vision, which would ultimately result in the emergence of information as both a commodity and an asset class, Schwartz’s films instead explore the contingencies of rendering information with the newly developing medium of the computer. TI - Encoded Perception JO - Feminist Media Histories: An International Journal DO - 10.1525/fmh.2021.7.1.172 DA - 2021-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/university-of-california-press/encoded-perception-jI6Goq4b0H SP - 172 EP - 196 VL - 7 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -