Archive Search

  • Abbado, Adriano. Arte audiovisiva (1999).
  • The Four Senses was a series of multi-sensory concerts performed at the Dorothy Winstone Theatre in Auckland in 2002. It built upon two 1999 events - one conceptualised and realised by New Zealand artist Raewyn Turner and one that was created by
  • The Spectrascope -
    The gallery installation of The Spectrascope consists of a large scale projection of the image updating in real-time accompanied by the 'fear frequency'*. This is an audio frequency of 19hz, which is just below the range of normal
  • Mercury Project combined robotics and archaeology in an interactive art installation. To our knowledge, the Mercury Project was the first system that allowed WWW users to remotely view and alter the real world via tele-robotics. Users excavated
  • A romance thriller about shopping, Artificial Changelings is presented as an installation in which one person at a time uses body movement to interact with sound and images. Viewers can take turns either as particpants or spectators. The story opens
  • Tongues of Fire -
    Film recordings of vibrating flames represent the articulations of speech, based on 19th century manometric flame devices. (source: www.well.com/~demarini)
  • Inside sixteen flowerpots placed in a dark room, motors run to rotate transparent disks. A viewer peeking into a flowerpot will find an animation of the images printed on the transparent disk, illuminated by the switching of small white LED, and
  • Her Long Black Hair -
    Janet Cardiff's Her Long Black Hair is a 35-minute journey that begins at Central Park South and transforms an everyday stroll in the park into an absorbing psychological and physical experience. Cardiff takes each listener on a winding journey
  • Morel´s Panorama -
    Digital video installation Custom-made panorama camera, PC, data projector, Macintosh, loud speakers In Morel's Panorama, imagery fed from a panoramic camera (installed in the centre of the gallery) is mapped onto a rendered cylindrical image
  • The 19th century Praxinoscope consisted of a circular beveled mirror reflecting a series of animation frames. When the device is spun, a moving image appears on the mirror. Using wind as the power and a structure that references the Eiffel Tower