Archive Search

  • .. "Ideally by using these technologies, art should see through them and unveil this imperative role in our society. When it is aesthetically pleasing, the truth doesn’t hurt so much" ..
  • Waterfall Mansion and Gallery is proud to present an exhibition on women’s empowerment, “The Need For My Care”, inspired by Maya Angelou’s “Phenomenal Woman”. In honour of International Woman’s Day, we give laud to the strengths, mystery, beauty,
  • Tenhaaf, Nell. Mysteries of the Bioapparatus In Immersed in Technology: Art, Culture and Virtual Environments, edited by Mary Anne Moser and Douglas MacLeod, 51-71. : The MIT Press and The Banff Centre, 1996.
  • Tenhaaf, Nell. Of Monitors and Men and Other Unsolved Feminist Mysteries: Video Technology and the Feminine In Critical Issues in Electronic Media, edited by Simon Penny, 219-233. Buffalo, USA: Suny Press, 1995.
  • Wilson, Ian. Shakespear: Unlocking: The mysteries of the man and his work. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1999.
  • ADA Artist Interview with Suzanne AnkerArchive of Digital Art, September 2021Full text and interview by Carla Zamora on ADA:https://www.digitalartarchive.at/features/featured-artists/featured-artist-suzanne-anker.htmlYou are considered being a
  • Dislocation of Intimacy is a net-based installation by Ken Goldberg and Bob Farzin that explores the delicate relationship between the immediate and the mediated. The installation includes a sealed black steel box in our studio that is accessible
  • It is 1919. Victor Tausk, a Vienese psychoanalyst examines a patient, Miss Natalija A. She tells him that her mind and body are being manipulated by a mysterious electrical apparatus operated secretly by physicans in Berlin.
  • Beyond -
    In a playful spirit of philosophical inquiry, Beyond explores the paradoxes of technology, desire and the paranormal posed since the birth of mechanical reproduction: the phonograph severing the voice from the body, photography capturing the soul
  • This high-tech treatment of Shakespeare's masterpiece played June 29 - July 1, 2000 in the Lumley Studio Theatre at the University of Kent at Canterbury. The Y2K production of A Midsummer Night's Dream marks a collaboration between