Archive Search

  • Grau, Oliver. A história da telepresenca: automatos, ilusao e a rejeicao do corpo In Corpos Virtuais, edited by Ivana Bentes, 112-117. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Centro Cultural Telemar, 2005.
  • Centro Cultural Telemar is called now OI FUTURO
  • The Globe Show -
    Two week fax and E-mail event and telematic workstation between Fine Art students from Newport School of Fine Art in the UK and international artist, scientists and academics.
  • Intuitive movements in front of a mirror are banal. Replacing the mirror by a screen showing a similar mirrored image, but filmed and augmented with "transfiction/alized” elements, results in visual interaction, in body movements, which can trigger
  • Earth Signals -
    Earth Signals - A telematic "leaf shaped" installation structure housing six Commodore Amiga computers displaying image files, received via E-mail from Artists throughout the UK, for the Omphalos Gallery in Swiss Cottage London, England, June to
  • Telematic Vision -
    Artistic Statement by Paul Sermon First there was the bed, then came the sofa. The beginnings of this work started with the installation "Telematic Dreaming" produced in June 1992 for the "koti" exhibition in Kajaani, Finland. forwarding the
  • Texts Bombs and Videotape - A 24 hour fax, E-mail and SlowScan TV event presented as a telematic workstation between Newport School of Fine Art in the UK, The Hochschule fuer angewandte Kunst in Vienna and the Digital Art Exchange in Pittsburgh,
  • Ouija -
    Ken Goldberg is one of the pioneers of telematic works, and "Ouija 2000" is not only a playful stab at the idea of global mind through the nostalgia of a Ouija board, it introduces important elements of real-time collaboration. "Ouija 2000"
  • Mori -
    In Mori, the immediacy of the telematic embrace between earth and visitor questions the authenticity of mediated experience in the context of chance, human fragility, and geological endurance. Mori engages the earth as a living medium. Minute
  • The Trace - video
    "The Trace" is a telepresence installation that invites two participants in remote sites to share the same telematic space. The piece consists of vectors, sounds and graphics that respond to the movement of the participants. Two interactive stations