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  • ...How can we see that the lively dancer on stage is on her way to be resurrected...
  • Acentria
    video 4,'54 The video is dedicated to a friend, renowned Slovenian composer, academic and pianist JM, who passionately celebrated the miracle of music and life in everything he did. RIP JM (1926–2022).
  • Mixed reality installation "COMBATscience Augmented II" is a mixed reality installation that critically reflects on science and its ethical implications, beginning with the gas attacks in World War I and continuing to contemporary research on
  • ... look back at us, echoing the liveliness, the animation and 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
  • Visitors inhabit a dome-space where they move, communicate and interplay with performers. An experience of audience participation and multi-user interaction. Home to layers of performance, image, sound, text and interactivity, the dome space
  • Collection: Museum of Modern Art, New York. Csuri continued with this experimentation on other drawings, including one of a hummingbird in flight. Csuri produced over 14,000 frames, which exploded the bird, scattered it about, and reconstructed it.
  • Responsive audiovisual installation where visitors playfully stack, as if pieces of a giant interactive puzzle, plastic bins that act as symbols of containers transiting world markets. Video-mapping projections react to the new sculptural
  • "Did you know it takes exactly 24 hours at 24fps to display each pixel on a High Definition Television screen? Initially, an animation is created by translating an image of Nam June Paik's TV-Buddha with a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. Achieved
  • Anamorph-Lattice, 6 black-white family snapshots repeated 30 times are organized by the Voronoi mathematical model so that the images disrupt the frontal perspective viewing, creating altered perspectives reminiscent of 16th and 17th century