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  • Vacuum formed plexi-glass, light projection Series (6): Tooth, Eyelash, Skin, Hair, Tooth v.2, Nail Dim: 80 x 90 cm (each) This series of relief light-sensitive works was conceived on the basis of computer-modified microscopic images of particles of
  • A HUMANISED BUTTERFLY NAMED LEDA MELANITIS Yiannis Melanitis physical information exhanges between organisms The terms ‘‘gene,’’ ‘‘organism,’’ and ‘‘species’’ have been used in a wide variety of ways, in a wide variety of contexts. Anyone who
  • Seeing Double -
    The exhibition is structured primarily around the discourse of vision and optics and centered around a new eight-minute anamorphic film, titled What Will Come (2006), which takes its title from a Ghanaian proverb: "What will come has already come."
  • Heroes are hard to find. The few, who are considered to be worth remembering, are placed somewhere, soon to be forgotten. In the obscurity of arterial roads and shaggy groves characters of bronze or stone wait to be recognised. Maybe they freeze in
  • Multiplicity -
    These manually created photomontages were created as the basis for an op-art style silkscreen series and its further development as a kinetic object.
  • My Father
    This early plotter drawing later served as the basis for two different versions of "Sineman Two." In "Sineman Two" Csuri applies the sine curve function to the drawing of "My Father" and then created a black ink drum plotter drawing and a red photo
  • #1 Vortex #2 Torus #3 Skyrmion Lattice #4 Skyrmion Collapse #5 Cross (B=16 Skyrmion) #6 Spiral (cross-section of horizontal vortex) kinetic light objects (series of 6) plexiglass, LED reflectors, turntables variable dimensions, diameter: 60 cm,
  • The augmented reality (AR) installation Gardens of the Anthropocene posits a science-fiction future in which native aquatic and terrestrial plants have mutated to cope with the increasing unpredictable and erratic climate swings. The plants in the
  • And That’s The Way It Is is a collaboration between the University of Texas’s public art program Landmarks and The Office for Creative Research from the spring of 2012. Drawing on transcripts from the Cronkite archives held by the Briscoe Center and
  • Decode: Digital Design Sensations showcases the latest developments in digital and interactive design, from small, screen-based, graphics to large-scale interactive installations. The exhibition includes works by established international artists