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  • 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
  • Dinka Pignon is an interdisciplinary media artist working with spatial video installation and performance art. Her experimental practice is characterized by a strong affinity for the phenomenal, liminal, conceptual and minimal. Her work is situated
  • Vita: Susanne Schuricht is based in Berlin. Her work engages in installations and photography and is about "the perception of seeing." In many of here installations the human scale and interaction are relevant. From 1997 - 2003 she studied
  • 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
  • Andrea Polli is an artist working at the intersection of art, science and technology whose practice includes media installation, public interventions, curating and directing art and community projects and writing. She has been creating media and
  • 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 foundation of my work has always begun with the photograph, which has been rightly considered a “moment” often effectively standing as a singular, self-contained expression. Although this is certainly one important aspect of photography, it has
  • 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
  • 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