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  • Bio-Présence -
    The Biopresence project began with the destiny of Biscarosse's elm trees, which is indeed the story of all the elms of France, which the so- called "elm disease" has practically wiped from the French countryside. This obliteration has diminished an
  • Cobb, Jennifer. Cybergrace: The Search for God in the Digital World. New York: Crown Publishing Group, 1998.
  • Crowston, Catherine. Janet Cardiff, George Bures Miller: The Dark Pool Banff Centre (online publication) (1995).
  • Frelih, Črtomir. Risba/Drawing Gallery ZDSLU. Ljubljana: Ljubljana Fine Artists Society (2007).
  • SWARM
    carpenters workshop gallery is proud to present a solo show by random international. following the success of random international's inclusion in Decode Digital Design Sensations at the Victoria & Albert Museum, this much anticipated show presents
  • The Teacup Tools are an array of cybernetic teacups, adapting themselves to the realm of climate related sciences.They appear as a multifunctional tool for the investigation of tiny micro clouds above tea, for communication and for tea drinking.
  • Playhouse
    Janet Cardiff’s Playhouse [1997], a collaborative installation with George Bures Miller was first exhibited at the Barbara Weiss Gallery in Berlin. Playhouse combines sculpture, sound, video and performance in a fusion that experiments with
  • Fifteen points (XV) defines the role of cognitive dissonance in diverse reactive spaces. In an interactive floor projection, viewers are encouraged to move throughout the space and engage in the manipulation of the art piece. Detecting both sound
  • In our post-future era of acceleration and densification of information, the state and nature of being live and online becomes one of the crucial definers of our social presence. Response and action are compressed into an existential here and now
  • The exhibition entitled Digital Abstraktionen is on view at the Basel House of Electronic Arts (HeK) in April and May 2016. The exhibition is curated by Alexandra Adler and Reinhard Storz. The project Digital Abstraction explores abstract works of