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  • Birds in the Hat (1968), presents an iconic example of an early plotter drawing, a printing technique that allowed for an ink pen to be guided by digital input. Executed using an IBM 7094 computer and a drum plotter, this work mathematically
  • Light from Tomorrow -
    Light from Tomorrow is an artwork by British artists Thomson & Craighead. It centres on an expedition to The Kingdom of Tonga, where tomorrow’s outdoor light-readings are broadcast in close to real time through The International Dateline to
  • Drawing Machine 3.1415926 v. 2 explores the notion of generative art or art that makes art on its own. The piece consists of a three tiered mobile sculpture that is driven by the vibration of a motor. This vibration is controlled in two ways. First
  • Gere, Charlie. When New Media Was New In New Media Art: Practice and Context in the UK, 1994-2004, edited by Lucy Kimbell and H. Cadwallader, 46-63. Manchester: Cornerhouse Publications, 2004.
  • Pieter-Rim de Kroon, Julien Devaux, Jean-Charles Fitoussi, Jean-Luc Godard, Ellen Harvey, Takehito Koganezawa, Malcolm Le Grice, Marcello Mercado, Anne-Marie Miéville, Vincent Monnikendam, Jacco Olivier, Jos Stelling, Straub/Huillet »
  • Fly Objects © 2018, Christa SOMMERER & Laurent MIGNONNEAU represented by: Galerie Charlot, Paris Galerie Anita Beckers, Frankfurt Fly Objects is collection of artworks in different forms and formats, they are all based on the motif of the fly.
  • ... Tomoe Moriyama Jean Louis Boissier ...
  • Portrait on the Fly – Plotter Drawings Plotter Drawings made with a Pen Plotter Printer ©2015, Laurent Mignonneau and Christa Sommerer represented by: DAM Galerie Berlin, Galerie Charlot Paris Galerie Anita Beckers Portrait on the Fly also exists
  • Measurements 33 x 56 x 22 cm (13 x 22 x 8.5 in.) Csuri's wooden sculpture Numeric Milling is one of the few early computer sculptures created with a computer-driven milling machine. Artist's Comments This work made use of the Bessel function to
  • Grass - video
    The original programming language "GRASS" (GRAphics Symbiosis System) was developed by Thomas DeFanti for his Ph.D. dissertation at The Ohio State University in 1974. For further information, see Wayne Carlson, Historical Significance In 1969, the