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  • Studied mathematics in Stuttgart (Dr.rer.nat. 1967); postdoctoral fellow at Department of computer science, University of Toronto (1968/69); assistant professor computer science, University of B.C., Vancouver (1970-72); professor for computer
  • American digital artist. His work has been exhibited at a variety of national and international venues including the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte in Spain; the Laguna Art Museum in Laguna Beach, California; the Museum of Modern Art in New York,
  • Owens is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and curator interested in the influence of digital networks and communication systems on contemporary aesthetics and the production of subjectivity. She is Director of Cornell Council for the Arts and
  • Catherine Richards is a visual artist and professor working in old and new media. She uses installations and participatory strategies to reflect on the idea of technological impact in the body and often uses transparency and electricity as an
  • Viewpoint Dependent Imaging: An interactive stereoscopic displayAuthor: Fisher, Scott S.
  • Fisher, Scott S.. Viewpoint Dependent Imaging: An interactive stereoscopic display In Proc. SPIE367, edited by S. Benton: J.J. Pearson, 1982.
  • "Life SpaciesII" was originally developed for the ICC InterCommunication Museum in Tokyo as part of the museum's permanent collection. It is an artificial life environment where remotely located visitors on the Internet and the on-site visitors
  • Pneutube -
    A large transparent inflatable tube the public could enter and which, depending on the context of presentation, functioned as an expanded cinema and performance environment, playful interactive space and architectual corridor.
  • A Sense of Place -
    An out-of-focus "still-life" image of a window display is projected on a full screen gallery wall. As the audience moves in the gallery space, items from the inventory of objects in the image come into focus depending on the audience's relative
  • "Body Movies" transforms public space with 400 to 1,800 square metres of interactive projections. Thousands of photo portraits taken on the streets of the cities where the project is exhibited are shown using robotically controlled projectors.