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  • Light objects Series 'Mirrors of the Unseen (MotU)' At what point are terms recognisable and integrable into one’s own linguistic system? Which synonymous manifestations does language have? The light objects 'MotU #1 to #3' present onomatopoetic
  • Sprache Sehen -
    Computer-controlled interactive light installation Polytechnic school Bregenz (AT), extension Baumschlager/Eberle, competition, realization 1996–8 [English title, 'Seeing Language'] In each of the three staircases of the new building of the HTL
  • WINTERMUSIK -
    The interconnection between the musical and the visual work is particularly based on a constant exercise of deconstruction, where the human being and his body emerge as a matter of invention and of “decomposition” in many expression and in a
  • Carl Theodor Dreyer's 1928 'La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc' is arguably one of the finest films in the history of film, and Renée Jeanne Falconetti, primarily known as a stage performer in light opera, provides it with one of cinema's most harrowing
  • a straw-like user interface (SUI) developed by inami laboratory at keio university, japanis an interface system that allows user to virtually experience the sensations of drinking. this simulation is based on the research data collected on the
  • In this poem we look straight down at the top surface of a cube. An invisible light source orbits the cube, casting verbal shadows that can be seen gyrating clockwise, much in the manner of a sundial. As new shadows are cast, the letters permutate
  • 'Divination: A Romantic Mutiny in a Maelstrom of Data' by Nancy Mauro-Flude. Produced by Contemporary Art Tasmania. The maiden voyage performance of Pyrate Queen and her crew, set sail for the duration of Dark Mofo 10–19 June 2016. Toured in 2017
  • "Comestible 7-Day Meal Plan: Food as Text" combines alternative publishing with book arts and new media. It is an ecological manifesto in the form of an 84-page artist's Cookbook that infuses a critical viewpoint on the use of food as a tool for the
  • Birds in the Hat (1968), presents an iconic example of an early plotter drawing, a printing technique that allowed for an ink pen to be guided by digital input. Executed using an IBM 7094 computer and a drum plotter, this work mathematically