Özge Samancı (born 21 July 1975 in İzmir)[1] is a Turkish-American media artist, and associate professor at Northwestern University`s School of Communication.[2] She creates media art installations and graphic novels. Her art installations merge computer code and bio-sensors with comics, animation, interactive narrations, performance, and projection art.[3][4] Her installations use media arts to break down people's mental and emotional barriers and hear about environmental issues.[5] Her graphic novels combine drawings with three-dimensional objects.[6]
She is the author of an autobiographical graphic novel Dare to Disappoint (Farrar Straux Giroux, 2015).[7]
She won a 2017 Berlin Prize[8] with her graphic novel project Not Here but Everywhere. Her graphic novel Dare to Disappoint received international press attention and in 2016 won both Middle East Book Award and 30th Annual New York Book Show Award. She was a guest at the Berlin International Literature Festival.[9] She won 2020 Distinguished Alumna Award[10] from Georgia Institute of Technology.
Life
Samanci was born in 1975. She grew up in the coastal city of Izmir with her teacher parents.[11]
She studied mathematics at Boğaziçi University and published cartoons in humor and film magazines. She moved to the United States to pursue a Ph.D. on digital media at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her interest in comics expanded into visual arts and experimental media and she received an Andrew Melon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Art Practice Department of University of California, Berkeley.
Graphic novels and comics
Dare to Disappoint is Samanci's graphic coming-of-age memoir published by Farrar Straus and Giroux. Her story takes place after the military coup leading to Turkey's rapid change to neo-capitalism from 1980 to 2000. The book was translated into six languages. After going through the struggle of obtaining a degree in mathematics to please her father and society, she becomes a cartoonist and media artist.[12][13]
Evil Eyes Sea, her second graphic novel, is inspired by semi-autobiographical details. Ece and Meltem are economically struggling engineering students. They witness a freak accident. Ece and Meltem’s investigation into the accident will lead them on a search for truth and treasure hidden under the Bosphorus. Their hopes of solving their personal financial troubles become entangled with a political corruption story.