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  • Dinosaurus -
    This KU Theatre for Young people production is another step in the University Theatre's ongoing work with virtual reality technology. Director Patrick Carriere, Bemidji, MN, graduate student, and Mark Reaney professor of theatre & Film teamed
  • Tongues of Fire -
    Film recordings of vibrating flames represent the articulations of speech, based on 19th century manometric flame devices. (source: www.well.com/~demarini)
  • The Living Room -
    Gallery based distributed interactive digital video projection environment Multiple rooms, each approximately 12 x 10 x 6 metres 4 large scale projections, black and white and colour, multi-channel interactive sound Produced by The Film and
  • The Spectrascope -
    The gallery installation of The Spectrascope consists of a large scale projection of the image updating in real-time accompanied by the 'fear frequency'*. This is an audio frequency of 19hz, which is just below the range of normal
  • Infected -
    Infected is about the nature of the physical body in the context of future possibilities, and the new status of the corporeal body seen through dance and digitally manipulated imagery. The new bio-engineered body is still sexual, stark, brutal,
  • In the video (plasma screen) and sound installation Night Canoeing, one sees a mysterious image of water, light and steam. Snippets of a river's edge reveal that you are in a boat, part of a journey on a river at night. As both film and sound
  • A New Life -
    Digital video 4 mins 8 secs colour, stereo sound by Jon Rose A NEW LIFE is a digitally produced video tape loosely based around Dante's first novel The New Life. In addition it draws upon a number of works by the early Renaissance Italian
  • The society is always changing in a consequence of complex patterns of influences. The changes do not occur in a smooth flow but happens at different speeds at different times. The development of technology is given great importance in the history
  • Great Wall of China -
    The Great Wall of China is conceived for simultaneous realisation across media, including a Website (1995-96), a CD-ROM with portfolio of prints (1997-99) and an interactive installation (1999). The foundation of The Great Wall of China is a
  • This installation features the debut of an important new addition to the SCMA collection, “What Will Come” (2006), a major film by the South African artist William Kentridge. One of the most innovative aspects of Kentridge’s work is his hand-drawn