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Lagoogleglyph II
2015
Lagoogleglyph 2 is a distributed, global artwork that inscribes lagoglyphs into the environment and makes them visible to the world. It consists of a pixelated lagoglyph, referencing a rabbit head and specifically made by Kac for the eye of a
Lagoogleglyph III
2018
Lagoogleglyph 3 consists of a pixelated lagoglyph, referencing a rabbit head, made by Kac for the eye of a satellite used by Google. The artist hired the same satellite used by Google and produced a photograph identical to the kind used by Google
Lagoogleglyph IV
2018
Lagoogleglyph 4 is a pixelated lagoglyph, referencing a rabbit head and specifically made by Kac for the eye of a satellite used by Google. The artist hired the same satellite used by Google and produced a photograph identical to the kind used by
Dominic Harris
Dominic Harris (London, 1976) is an artist who uses technology to construct highly personal interpretations of the natural phenomena which surround us. His reverence for nature, coupled with his fascination for code, offers a surreal and whimsical
Molecular Invasion
2002
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2004
Molecular Invasion was a participatory science-theater work done in cooperation with students from the Corcoran School of Art and Design and exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, DC. In this work, CAE/da Costa/Pentecost and selected
The Connection Machines CM-1 and CM-2
1986
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1987
The Connection Machine was the first commercial computer designed expressly to work on simulating intelligence and life. A massively parallel supercomputer with 65,536 processors, it was the brainchild of Danny Hillis, conceived while he was a
Gregoire Rousseau
Gregoire Rousseau is an artist and educator based in Helsinki. He is graduated both as an Electrical Engineer and Masterof Fine Arts in Uniarts, and currently, a doctoral candidate at Aalto University with the research "CommoningEducation,Educating
Narcissus' Well: Research Exhibit
2003
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2006
Mirrors: the Real and the Virtual, an information display about the project on view at the NASA-Goddard Research Center in Greenbelt, MD, where the project was developed in collaboration with optics engineer Joseph Howard between 2003 - 2005.
Peter Broadwell
Peter grew up around the world, studied math, and liked to build things. Using math to make pictures led him to computers, which led to trying to “get the darn things to generate pretty images easily”. Still striving for that goal, with a day job at
Roberto Lopez-Gulliver
Roberto Lopez-Gulliver is a Mexican Media artist and researcher. Received his BSc degree in Mathematics form the Autonomous University of Guadalajara with honors for his thesis work titled: "Bounded Variation Functions: Differenciation and
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