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  • ... fingers and the piano...
  • Digital Landfill -
    An neverending archive of digital trash. The artist has created an interface, in which the User can copy files from his computer or foreign websites - he can trash them. In a few seconds the files appear in different layers on the monitor. Now you
  • Plasm: Not a Crime -
    "Plasm: not a crime" is the artistic statement of Peter Broadwell and Rob Myers that sharing secrets is not a crime. It used to be that most interactions between people took place face to face. If you had a desire to keep something confidential,
  • Shadow Dance: Eclipse -
    This multimedia exhibit is not a kiosk, there is no mouse, no keyboard. Shadow Dance: Eclipse Exhibit is an interactive, multi-user, multi-channel, floor-sensor driven environment encouraging its users to create an eclipse by aligning the Sun, Moon
  • RobotPHONE -
    RobotPHONE is a Robotic User Interface (RUI) that uses robots as physical avatars for interpersonal communication. Using RobotPHONE, users in remote locations can communicate shapes and motion with each other. For a long time, robots have
  • "Unreal City" is a collection of images I have found on the walls in the Soho and Bowery areas of New York City. Every day these walls change as new layers of advertising are pasted over old, creating a soup of words, faces and textures. Add
  • Recombinant Icon -
    This work was made in response to Patrick Lichty's request for a web based artwork which would critically address the icon, an essential element in most graphical user interfaces found in computer operating systems today. Recombinant Icon refers
  • Echelon -
    This work was made in response to a call by Metamute (London) for Jam Echelon Day 2001. It simply employs all the words stored in the Echelon system in a program that automatically generates texts using whatever dictionary it has available.
  • The interactive 3D virtual reality installation "The Travels of Mariko Horo" is a reverse Marco Polo fantasy imagining the fictitious Mariko Horo as a Japanese time-traveler searching for the Western Paradise of Buddhist mythology, the Isles of the
  • Can you see me now? -
    Can You See Me Now?draws upon the near ubiquity of handheld electronic devices in many developed countries. Blast Theory are fascinated by the penetration of the mobile phone into the hands of poorer users, rural users, teenagers and other