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  • Monogram
    August 22, 1997 (Kennedy Space Center, Florida)— A Jet Propulsion Laboratory technician inserts the DVD containing Kac's Monogram and many other files into a shallow cavity between two pieces of aluminum that protected it from micrometeoroid
  • Since 1997, the Rencontres Internationales has existed as an interdisciplinary project designed to promote new cinema, video and multimedia. Each year, in Paris, Berlin and Madrid, the festival presents an international programme which brings
  • Sauerlaender, Tina. Reflecting on Life on the Internet: Artistic Webcam Performances from 1997 to 2017 Self-Representation in an Expanded Field, Ace Lehner (Ed), MDPI, 2021 (2021).
  • DOMINGUES, DIANA MARIA G. TRANS-E, My Body, My Blood Catálogo Isea - Chicago 1 (1997): 58-59.
  • World Skin is an interactive artwork presented for the first time at Ars Electronica (Linz, Austria). It won the Golden Nica Award in the Interactive Art category in 1998. Armed with cameras, we are making our way through a three-dimensional
  • Die Sprache der Dinge -
    Die Sprache der Dinge is an archive of personal memorabilia presented on a conveyor belt-like 'shelf' on the black monitor screen, and able to be arranged according to numerous objective criteria. Associative spoken texts accompany each
  • TRIAD NetDance was a live Internet netcast between Helsinki, Tokyo and New York on 5th of June 1998. TRIAD NetDance took place simultaneously on three stages in three different countries. The dancer, choreographer Molissa Fenley was dancing in New
  • transmedia '97 -
    The festival focused again on multimedia, innovative television and video. In 1997, the festival also integrated technological developments and philosophical discourses relevant to these media realms into the programme: brain research,
  • DOMINGUES, DIANA MARIA G. As Instalações Multimídia Como Espaços de Dados Em Sinestesia Relações Corpo/ Arquitetura/ Memória e Tecnologias. Coletânea Ccha Cultura e Saber, Caxias do Sul: EDUCS 1, no. 2 (1997): 33-51.
  • On a dark computerscreen the viewer sees a threedimensional sphere with a surface showing a closeup view of human skin. By lifting up the mouse and moving the ball underneath with the thumb the movement of the virtual object can be manipulated.