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  • A 442 Hz. - video
    ...Songs of the Revolution “A 442 Hz” is a digital single screen installation by Egyptian media artist Sameh Al Tawil Musicians holding different instruments emerge in front of the steadily focused camera from beyond the screen of the film (hors-champ) [2] and into the...
  • Digital Portrait inspired by Matthew Florez: The difference between perceived self, and the rest of the universe.
  • ... perception based on his movement. "Lago sotteraneo" is an underground lake where fantasy and memory merge together. A digital image is horizontally projected on a sheet of water in a natural cave (exhibited in a cave in Bassano in Teverina). The play...
  • ...All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players -- Shakespeare. World Stage, uses digital representations of global species of butterflies to animate the powerful iconography of worldwide flags. In a year when national, political and social identity...
  • ... sixty fish-eye images that are presented in a random sequence, transforming from one into another using specially programmed digital animations. This site-specific installation has a 4K resolution, 6 m diameter projection dome installed on the ground floor...
  • ... the search for the Soul of the City. Stanza presented this artwork below and gave an artists talk as part of the Folly Digital Lunch series. Twelve guests were invited to this Last Supper and literally ate an artwork the artist created at The...
  • ...Visit-US (2005, 1 minute, digital animation) Visit-US explores the ways in which national border controls have been updated and expanded through the use of digital technology and electronic surveillance. The transition from an emphasis on physical border controls to an...
  • Pro
    ... framing motif of Chinese traditional landscape painting, Pro invites the viewer into a familiar but also un-known space of digital hyper-reality.
  • ... Technology, we used the Thinking Machines’ CM-5, a parallel computer, for generative image synthesis. Starting with a digital photo of Birlinghoven Castle, the CM-5 displayed a grid of twenty mutations of the original image. The process was interactive:...
  • ... an article titled “The Recognition of Faces” by Bell Labs researcher Leon Harmon that explained how we perceive pixelated digital photographic images. Using a low-resolution, portrait of Lincoln to describe the phenomena, (which Salvador Dali later integrated...