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  • Chromatic Shifts is a dynamic light installation that explores perceptual changes of shape at a cognitive level. Rhythmic pulses of color illuminate ambiguous and “impossible” shapes as they appear to shift between two and three dimensions.
  • ... anarchistic tendencies who has worked in...
  • ... It is this denunciation of the normal...
  • Data Murmur - video
    The notable Italian political philosopher Franco "Bifo" Berardi recites a random poem of HTML code twice. First on the left of the split screen the camera maintains its distance allowing the bard to enact the poem, his shock of silver hair melting
  • Such is the very essence of this work, which utilizes these various strategies, layered upon each other to create a metaphor about grief and loss. For the stereo speakers can be about brothers, lovers, twins and the destruction of one's mate when it
  • In the Mind’s I is a one-on-one performative art work in which Warren Neidich utilizes visual memories of objects and scenarios of participants and a set of presented real objects from which the visitor may choose from to create works of art in
  • Brainwash - video
    In Brainwash the actor and audience watch the turning of a black and white striped drum. This drum is both an early cinematic zoetrope and a diagnostic neurological tool. Certain individuals suffer from cerebellar tumors and strokes leading to a
  • Jackpot is an Internet slot machine that downloads three randomly selected web sites and displays them in the browser's window along with their top level domain names. You win by matching any of the top level domains. The winner can submit a URL of
  • Turnstile II creates a virtual gateway where an endless realm of content is generated by the live culling of network objects from HTML pages, live chat and email archives. Through a familiar interface of a typewriter printing characters onto the
  • metaView is a web viewer that displays information contained within the HTML tags which is typically not displayed in regular web browsers. metaView was first shown at the New Media Centre at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK in 1998.