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  • Airground -
    The Airgrounds were a new genre of air structures comprising soft, responsive architectures the public could interact with. At the Brighton Festival a pyramid-shaped inflatable with a transparent outer skin and yellow inner skin, partially inflated
  • AME: Art After Museum -
    an art collection concieved by contemporary artists for virtual reality OPUS IN MACHINA > IMAGO EX MACHINA ART EXPLORER : AN ACTIVE SPECTATOR Milestones for an Art After Museum Is there thing such as Art After Museum ? Cosa Mentale Back to
  • A virtual reality murder mystery - part movie, part performance - was created at The Banff Centre for the Arts in Canada, in collaboration with Michael Mackenzie. It is an immersive interactive narrative piece. It combines interactive computer
  • In this geolocative augmented reality installation, a grid of ARt critics seem to scream "You call THIS ARt???" On October 9 2010, Sander Veenhof & Mark Skwarek organized "We AR in MoMA," an uninvited cyberspace takeover of the Museum of Modern Art
  • Art Total -
    The relationship between the work and its frame and between art and its spaces for exhibition and legitimisation has been one of the preoccupations of twentieth-century artists. In the multiple conceptual acrobatics which led Klein to exhibit
  • Audible Collage -
    The audio play "Audible Textcollage" offers a performance in which two electronic reporters, Klara and Rainer, based on AT&T Text-to-Speech, using rule-based AI methods, have a conversation about the book and also provide a book review of the print
  • Workshop and exhibition, results from the collaborative practice of a group of scientists and artists who were involved in all stages from the preparatory stages, in Brazil, to the event in Havana. LART, in the Art and Science circuit by proposing
  • Biomer Skelters (“biome” + “helter-skelter“) is a crowd sourced, wild growth forest-to-rainforest propagator that creates a city-wide public artwork by connecting participants’ interior biorhythms to exterior urban ecosystems.
  • Blow Up records, amplifies, and projects human breath into a room-sized field of wind. The installation comprises two devices. The first is a rectangular array of twelve small impellers, which stands on a table on one side of the gallery. This small
  • video, 7.40’ The video Bodyfraction parallels microscopic images of fragments of the artist’s body (tooth enamel, skin, nails, hair etc.) with recordings of drawings and light-sensitive objects created on their basis. Drawings were digitally