Archive Search

  • Event: Dak Nong Cultural Museum - Gia Nghia (Vietnam) / "Explorasound"Institution: Ars Electronica Linz GmbH & Co KGComment:
  • Move 36
    "Move 36" explores the permeable boundaries between the human and the nonhuman, the living and the nonliving. The title of "Move 36" refers to the dramatic chess move made by computer Deep Blue against world champion Gary Kasparov in 1997 -- a chess
  • Vanessa Vozzo is a media artist and professor. She has been working in art since 1990. Specializing in media art from 2005, particularly in the field of art and science/hybrid art and interactive/open documentary. She uses interactive, immersive and
  • Eduardo Kacsounding out the non-binaryThe Archive of Digital Art, 06/2022Text by Carla Zamora and Samantha Mealing, Interview on Time Capsule by Samantha Mealing,Rachel de Joode and Herbert Gmoser.“In the course of pursuing Bio Art we have
  • Eduardo Kac, pioneer of multiple art genres like Telematic Art, Transgenic Art and Bio Art, guides us through 40 years of radical changes in the body-technology relationship, offering different approaches on how to reflect the boundaries of human
  • Four divisions were established: Digital Art [Interactive], Digital Art [Noninteractive], Animation and Manga.
  • Cyber Squeeks -
    The Cyber-Squeek series spoofs the emergence of machine intelligence, in which electronics integrated with life-like forms, have begun to squeak their first words; in their language. Through multiple sensors and switches they respond to human touch
  • Under Fire -
    UNDER FIRE is an ongoing art and research project that explores militarization and political violence. It delves into the structural, symbolic, and affective dimensions of armed conflicts: the organization, representation, and materialization of
  • Upon the invitation of the Lindisfarne Association and the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine in New York City, a concert of audiovisual mathematics/music took place in the Cathedral Church on 17 October, 1992, at about eight o'clock in
  • Carl Theodor Dreyer's 1928 'La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc' is arguably one of the finest films in the history of film, and Renée Jeanne Falconetti, primarily known as a stage performer in light opera, provides it with one of cinema's most harrowing