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  • Pam Skelton is a media artist, professor and researcher. Is Professor at Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design and Research Associate at the Photograph and the Archive Research Centre, London. Studied at Southport School of Art Camberwell
  • The elegant 19th-century interior of the Rideau Chapel is once again transformed through Janet Cardiff’s extraordinary audio installation Forty-Part Motet, a contemporary reworking of Spem in Alium by the 16th-century composer Thomas Tallis.
  • After finishing the computer animation version of "The Forest", Waliczky began to work on the second, interactive variant of "The Forest", in collaboration with Jeffrey Shaw and Sebastian Egner. Here, the animation becomes part of an interactive
  • Thomas Tallis, one of the most influential English composers of sixteenth century, wrote Spem in Alium nunquam habui, a choral work for eight choirs of five voices, to mark the fortieth birthday of Queen Elizabeth I in 1575. This piece of music
  • Seiko Mikami passed away of cancer in January 2015. She was an interactive media artist that has been working in the realms of information systems and human sensing. Showing large-scale installations since the 80's she used sound, robotics and
  • In 1991 Waliczky wrote the script for THE GARDEN, an animation based on an idea which came from an old piece of Super-8 film, made over ten years before, showing a little girl playing in a country garden. The artist's aim was to portray the
  • "Conversation" is an interactive multimedia show. As I am free to alter succession, lenght and speed of the animated sequences by exploiting the interactive possibilities of the computer, and as Tibor Szemzõ is also free to vary the musical motifs
  • Pictures
    ... virtual form: details from the first...
  • Animation is an illusion of movement. Movement is based on space and time. SPACE. My work consists of several short animations. Every animation is based on only one photograph. Every photo contains several visual elements, and every photo creates
  • Sculptures -
    For us humans, who are limited in time and space, time is a one-dimensional affair. We can move only along one axis we define in co-ordinates of "past-present-future". (In this definition, "present" is the origin of our co-ordinate system, "past"