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  • Bolt, Richard A.. The Human Interface: Where People and Computers meet. Stamford, Connecticut, US: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1984.
  • Packer, Randall and Ken Jordan. Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality. New York: W. W. Norton and Company Inc, 2002.
  • Davies, Char. Changing Space: Virtual Reality as an Arena of Embodied Being In Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality, edited by Randall Packer and Ken Jordan, 293-300. New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2002.
  • The video performance had been presented in Salerno, Italy, during the ARTMEDIA Congress (1992). The space of Paula Verengia's Gallery had been drawned with slides and video projections on the back of the room. An Italian Dancing Company named
  • I am an Artist and Animator. Originally from London, and graduating from a BA in Fine Art, I started exhibiting my sculptures in clubs and galleries in London in the early 90's. I collaborated with other Artists and musicians in the electronic music
  • HDH215 -
    This piece is about a personal memory from my hometown, the small city of Heidenheim in the rural south of Germany. My favourite intersection is located on Schnaitheimer Straße, at the top where the old customs office is situated. One day the
  • Dr Sean Clark is an artist and curator, the Director of Leicester arts company Interact Digital Arts, the Founder of web/mobile developer Cuttlefish Multimedia, a Visiting Researcher at the Institute of Creative Technologies at De Montfort
  • Marnix de Nijs is a Rotterdam based artist who explores the dynamic clash between bodies, machines and other media. His works include mainly interactively experienced machines that play with the perception and control of image and sound, but also,
  • Myron Krueger born in Gary, Indiana (USA); studied at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire from 1962-1964. From 1967 to 1974, he studied computer science at the University of Wisconsin. Krueger has been working together with artists since 1969. He has
  • EDEN Echigo-Tsumari -
    As we know, all vegetal species can communicate with its environment. Instead of words they use different kinds of molecular emission. The communication can be established between trees of the same species, but it can also be addressed to a