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  • Allen, Rebecca and Jane Nisselson. Computers Who Dance Digital Deli (1984).
  • Visualizations for the New York Talk Exchange, a project by the Senseable City Lab at MIT for the MoMA. New York Talk Exchange illustrates the global exchange of information in real time by visualizing volumes of AT&T long distance telephone and IP
  • Alvaro, Sandra and Guillermo Alonso R. and Federico López-Silvestre. “Reversing Ruins: Artistic Interventions for Recovering from Disaster Capitalism” In Planet Earth: Scientific Proposals to Solve Urgent Issues, edited by A. Núñez-Delgado, 83 -
  • Eden -
    Eden is an interactive, self-generating, artificial ecosystem. A cellular world is populated by collections of evolving creatures. Creatures move about the environment, making and listening to sounds, foraging for food, encountering predators and
  • bug[lab]02 -
    The installation gathers a group of 10 robotic dogs in which some punctual and random bugs emerge (this is almost a pleonasm) in order to ironically illustrate the potential consequences of some functional problems in the system. It consists of
  • Sophie Taeuber-Arp's Vanishing Lines Myriam Thyes, 2015, animation, HD video, 10:10, loop, stereo. Sound: Silvia Pachler. In what is, prima facie, a mesh of abstract lines, no few of the works that Sophie Taeuber-Arp completed between 1940 and 1942
  • With "Arabesque" I have concerned myself not only with the sculpting of three dimensions but also with a fourth, the dimension of time. I have endeavored to create a sculpture that evolves transforms and even regresses. An artwork that falls
  • Laser-cut and digital print on plexiglass, projected light variable dimensions Photosensitive images are based on microscopic images of the nanoparticles of a magnetic fluid’s crystallized structure. Digitally processed and laser-treated images of
  • Matthew Mirapaul. Deliberately Distorting the Digital Mechanism New York Times (21 April 2003).
  • hello process! -
    aymeric mansoux / marloes de valk , 2006-2010 Computer, dot matrix printer, chain paper and ink The source code of Hello Process! can be found at: http://gitorious.org/metabiosis/hello_process and it is sold under Public License GNU , version