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  • Noise and Smoke -
    This installation consists of two vintage Bakelite telephones from the 1950ies. They are placed in viewing distance to eachother. When visitors pick up their telephone receivers, dial a number and talk into their mouthpieces, their voices are
  • There is still time… Brother is rooted in the recording of a Wooster Group performance developed specifically to be viewed as a projection on a 360-degree screen. The video is revealed by way of a window that scans around the screen, never showing
  • Comparative historyArtist: Olga KisselevaComment:
  • Novus. Extinctus -
    Novus. ExtinctusArtist: (collective) Transnational TempsComment:
  • The Geo Quick Response project proposes to modify and question the representations of the geopark landscape, and also aims at making visitors aware of the more global problems raised by this landscape. By having visitors to interact with the work
  • It´s time
    IT'S TIME challenges one of the overarching question that pertains to the post-modern world: the acceleration of time induced by collective behaviors, and the level of frustration it induces on individuals. IT'S TIME aims at investigating several
  • JND is a new series of multimedia installations that explores the concept of just noticeable difference. The first project, Semblance, is an interactive installation exploring the phenomenon of cross modal perception - the ways in which one sense
  • DualTerm explores our contemporary experience of the global airport. Visitors to Toronto's Pearson Airport's Terminal One come upon a sculptural shape with five embedded plasma screen monitors. On the left most monitor, a computer generated 3-D
  • SCHWELLE II -
    Part II is a live dance theater performance with master improviser and former William Forsythe/Ballett Frankfurt dancer Michael Schumacher. During the fifty minute work, the spectators experience a person undergoing the traumatic transformation of
  • Nomad: The River is a 60 minute dance theater work created in collaboration with Chinese born, New York-based choreographer Yin Mei. The work is a haunting evocation of the choreographer's experience growing up in the political hysteria of the