Marilyn Minter, Green Pink Caviar, 2009. Single-channel video, 7 minutes 46 seconds. Courtesy of the artist and Salon 94, New York.
In section three of our exhibition Feast & Famine, Keary Rosen’s 3D food printer installation opposite Lauren Greenberg’s photo series documents the tension between humans and machines. How does technology shape one’s self-perception and our relationship to food? Continue down this corridor to see fast food paper bags, butterscotch candy wrappers, and green slime – these textures each spark a tactile sensory experience. This playlist reflects how musicians, singers, songwriters navigate describing manufactured space – external or internal.
Enjoy the curated sounds of 3D Feast OR Famine on our Spotify.
![](https://paulrobesongalleries.rutgers.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/rsz_ff_installview8_lp.jpg)
- Installation Photograph: Luisa Pinzon, 2019.
- 3D Food Printing Demonstration by artist Keary Rosen.
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3. Installation Photograph: Luisa Pinzon, 2019.
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4. Installation Photograph: Luisa Pinzon, 2019.
5. Installation Photograph: Arthur Paxton, 2019.
Jen Susman, Ideal Weight, 2011. Butterscotch wrappers, 24 x 24 x 3 inches.
6. Installation Photograph: Luisa Pinzon, 2019.
![](https://paulrobesongalleries.rutgers.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/rsz_ff_installview13_ap.jpg)
7. Installation Photograph: Arthur Paxton, 2019.