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  • news, Deseret. ‘All American’ plays with tradition at Salt Lake Art Center Deseret News (July 2009).
  • Lampo, Luca and Marco Deseriis and Domenico Quaranta. Connessioni Leggendarie. Net.art 1995-2005. Milano: ready-made, 2005.
  • Exodus
    The Exodus Project was a "virtual tele-performance" during Ars Electronica 1995 and brainchild of Michael Bielicky, a Czech-German New Media artist determined to replicate the biblical trail of the prophet Moses. This site is the Net result of
  • Desert rain -
    In this fascinating piece the company worked in collaboration with the Computer Research Group of the School of Computer Science at Nottingham University, UK. The piece was one of the most complex and powerful responses to the first Gulf War
  • Landscape Painting shows painted landscapes—a desert scene with cacti and rocks and a jungle scenario. The artist traveled to two locations in Mexico, where he selected an appropriate segment of land and organized a team of local helpers. He paid
  • sandbox -
    driessens & verstappen sandbox, 2009 Wood, lacquer, metal, fans, sand, electronics, 245 x 122 x 176 cm Supported by: Mondriaan Foundation, Ámsterdam Acknowledgements: The Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Architecture and Design,
  • The exhibition at the Negev Museum of Art is part of an international project, which originated in 2012 under the title of EDEN (Ethics, Durability, Ecology, Nature). The project is based on the idea of continuing the restoration of the enchanted
  • Domingues, Diana. The Desert of Passions and the Technological Soul In Digital Creativity, edited by Colin Beardon and Lone Malmborg and Masoud YazdaniVol.9. , 11-18. : Swets and Zeitlinger Publishers, 1998.
  • Exhibition dates: June 23, 2012 through February 24, 2013. Peter Weibel inaugurated the exhibition "Inter-Facing the Archive" by Fleischmann and Strauss at the ZKM Center for Art and Media Technology in Karlsruhe with the words: "Netzspannung.org
  • "Vectorial Elevation" was an interactive art project which allowed thousands of people from 89 countries to control 18 robotic searchlights with 126,000 watts of power and link Cyberspace with Mexico’s most emblematic urban landscape. Mexico City’s