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  • Activism -
    ACTivism was a computer videogame created by Beatriz Albuquerque in 2005-2007, exploring activist key words that functioned in the audience as a way to remember, transform persons that read them and further contemplate afterwards. With
  • A mixed reality, telematic video installation, which was performed in Hong Kong and Canada, it reflects on the 10th anniversary of 9/11. Visuals, movement and sound are combined into hybridized data and sent over a high high speed telematic research
  • A telematic mixed reality live-time performance between two places. A dancer performs in Canada, her movements are shown on two screens in Indiana, where musicians play in reaction to her movements. The combined visual and sound recordings trigger
  • The work depicts gene editing technology CRISPR which has the potential to treat genetically caused diseases, for instance, autism. The PHSCologram sculpture shows different phases of CRISPR genome editing. The first panel shows Cas9 protein in
  • The piece, being a part of the show “It’s Two Minutes to Midnight,” provides viewers with an educational journey on humankind’s history of de- and re-nuclearization. The show, organized by Weinberg/Newton Gallery in collaboration with the Bulletin
  • CRISPR-Cas9 is contrasted with Nude in box-reclining (1962) and Sand Dune Nude (1967) by Ruth Bernhard and Dix Rayogrammes de Man Ray et un Texte de Pierre Bost by Man Ray (1931).
  • The PHSCologram depicts the first computer-generated illustration of the AIDS virus, as known in 1987 when HIV infection was causing millions of deaths around the world. The image represents a colorized CAT scan of a person called Messiah who passed
  • Working extensively with social-political context from the 1980s, in 1991 (art)n created »The Equation of Terror« which referred to the Gulf War. The work entailed animated mathematical equations and PHSColograms which depicted economic, biological
  • The scenery referring to Martyl Langsdorf’s painting "Doomsday Clock Have a nice day" is contrasted with Martyl’s Doomsday Clock which she originally designed for the cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists magazine in 1947. The “Bulletin”,
  • Concentricity -
    Do you know that feeling when you're looking at some non-descript object and suddenly a jolt hits you? You notice an incredible wealth of details! Something you thought was mundane is actually incredibly beautiful with surfaces and textures that