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  • Planetary Network -
    The «daily news» was the theme of this project in which more than 100 artists on three continents participated. The artists worked with computers, video text, slow-scan-TV, and telefax. The live activities in Venice lasted a period of 14 days,
  • Ruth Schnell is an Austrian media artist, professor for media arts and curator. She has been working with computer-aided tools since the mid-1980s. Her artistic research focusses on examining the perception of images/sound/language in connection
  • Andrea Zapp, born in Germany, is an internationally exhibiting media artist working across many platforms, such as “Networked Installation Stages”, art installations that are mixing and referencing real, virtual and online spaces; “Media, Miniature
  • Telenoia -
    What TELENOIA is about is telematic connectivity, mind to mind across the globe. We'll use e.mail like Earn, Bitnet, Internet. We'll use Fax, Telephone of course, ISDN if it's accessible.If we get hold of Videophones or some means of
  • Station Rose/STR was founded in Vienna, Austria, in 1988 by Gary Danner (sound) and Elisa Rose (visuals). As one of the first digital groups worldwide Station Rose have used the potential of live audio visual media and the internet for performing in
  • The exhibition TRANS-E (trans, transit, trance!) consists of four installations shown simultaneously: Bio-Biblion, A-fetus, In-fluxus and The Supper. TRANS-E creates a series of experiences for the visitor involving the entire body.BIO-BIBLION is
  • The selection of Internet-based art for the 2002 Biennial strives to give an impression of the variety of forms that net art can take and of the multiple themes that have emerged over the years. These forms range from alternative browsers and
  • Ryoji Ikeda Exploring a new sensorium Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda creates at the extremes of sound, light and mathematics to produce complex transformative works of singular beauty. In Paris last year he projected vast blinding white light up into
  • Workaholic
    A pendulum hangs from the ceiling, with an omnidirectional bar code scanner as the bob (the weight) at the end of the cable. The scanner casts an intense red laser beam downward as it skims the floor, reading symbols printed on a 12 foot diameter
  • Bar Code Hotel recycles the ubiquitous symbols found on every consumer product to create an multi-user interface to an unruly virtual environment. The installation makes use of a number of strategies to create a casual, social, multi-person