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  • Feedback -
    ...Janet Cardiff's “Feedback” (2004) is an interactive sound piece that plays a Jimi Hendrix rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner” when the... Weil and further expands the Hirshhorn's collection of art made with new and, or nontraditional media (:source...
  • Cabin fever -
    In Cabin Fever, Cardiff and Miller reference traditional museum displays by using the formal structure of the diorama to transport the viewer into a scene depicting a cabin set deep in the woods. The captivating soundtrack, draws the viewers into
  • ... happen - the human being is not born but is already on the Internet. However, this tension finds its solution in the title “get.real”,... the inside of pregnant women’s body, the womb on the screen the artist defines a cyberspace as exclusively maternal. The space “behind”...
  • Sensity -
    ... installation and projected ie, making a display based on the net based interfaces using the data collected. 3. Sensity can be... Sensity is part of "The Emergent City" series of works by Stanza. Artworks monitoring the real time interactive city using wireless sensors....
  • ... camera, robots and projectors. Contact. Stanza at sublime.net Thanks to an AHRC creative fellowship and Goldsmiths digital... images in the gallery space. Prototype was tested in Plymouth arts centre 2008. INSTALLATION: Set up of drawing, camera, robots...
  • The Berlin Files -
    ... in a red dress walks out of a doorway towards you." (Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller) Janet Cardiff and George Bures... Files", it is initially the simulated presence of the two artists in their studio that seems to dominate as the primary level of...
  • Nanocities -
    ...Title. "Nanocities": 2006-8. Digital generative artwork by Stanza. "Nanocities" creates paintings actioned by the interpretation of the code....
  • ... that the random is random? data.tron[8k enhanced version] is part of datamatics project, a series of experiments that explore such...
  • ... for interaction in a non-obtrusive manner. (source:...
  • Hello, world! -
    “Hello, world!” analyses the ephemerality or longevity of storage media and uses acustic signals for data storage. In a closed system, which is made up of a computer, a loudspeaker, 246 metres of copper pipe and a microphon, circulates a codified,