Archive Search

  • World System -
    The theme of this project is "re-design for telephone". Winner of Japan Art Scholorship. This is a model of a flying TV-telephone which by itself float to find and link to other people (just like WWW). An idea "What if the original telephone
  • DREAMS REWIRED traces the desires and anxieties of today’s hyper-connected world back more than a hundred years, when telephone, film and television were new. As revolutionary then as contemporary social media is today, early electric media sparked
  • Hole-in-Space -
    On a November evening in 1980 the unsuspecting public walking past the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City, and "The Broadway" department store located in the open air shopping center in Century City (LA), had a surprising
  • Plant guilds is an artistic study on the possibility to visualize a design principle in Permaculture: that of considering inter-relations between different families of plants. It has been realized processing such consociations with the help of a
  • Telephony -
    Telephony allows gallery visitors to dial into a wall based grid of 42 Siemens mobile telephones, which in turn begin to call each other and create a piece of 'music.' Each phone has been individually programmed with a different ringtone, which
  • Goldberg, Ken, ed. The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000.
  • Grau, Oliver. The History of Telepresence: Automata, Illusion, and The Rejection of the Body In The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology on the Internet, edited by Ken Goldberg, 226-243. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2000.
  • Kac, Eduardo. Telepresence Art and Net Ecology In The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology on the Internet, edited by Ken GoldbergCambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000.
  • 1995 Luxembourg Kulturstadt Europas, Congress Center
  • Ray, Tom. Netlife - das Schaffen eines Dschungels im Internet In Stadt am Netz, Ansichten von Telepolis, edited by Stefan Iglhaut and Armin Medosch and Florian Rötzer, 118-126. Berlin: Bollmann Verlag, 1996.