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  • the moment -
    Showing for the first time in the UK, The Moment is a vast kaleidoscopic audio-visual installation by Doug Aitken, capturing the acute sense of disorientation experienced on waking in an unfamiliar place. (Source:
  • Langgpath -
    Kinetic sculpture that represents in real time the transfer of files from a database of moving bodies. Files of type BVH (biovision hierarchical files) are transferred between servers in the northern and southern hemispheres coinciding with the
  • Neuro Baby -
    ... if delivered like a drill sergeant,...
  • Inter Caetera Divina -
    Throughout the 5-day show, the robot arm drew world maps taken from the time of Columbus up through World War II. The title refers to the 1493 proclamation by Pope Alexander VI that divided the New World between Spain and Portugal.
  • TGarden is a responsive media environment in which small groups of participants from the general public influenced and played with real-time-generated sound and image through improvised movement and gesture. Visitors to the environment —which
  • Plain Text -
    ... like an odometer only... and time, the monkeys will...
  • Six interactive iPad/iPhone apps are available for free in the iTunes Store. They include: "Urban Rhythms," "Spine Sonnet," "Art Swipe," "4 Square" "Episodic" and "Time Jitters."
  • An Engine of Many Senses is a generative computational work exploring the history and potential future of the computer. It includes a series of media elements that combine and recombine over time -- 3d images, 2d stills, generative audio, generative
  • Audience -
    In February 2010, rAndom went to the US to install the first copy of the Audience edition for a private collection. The installation is laid out on a long stretch of a custom designed plywood floor. For the first time it was possible to install it
  • Document B -
    Life has a beginning, a middle and an end. Our minds and memories see time pass in a narrative stream, moving from a beginning towards a close, and this pattern informs our concepts – and our preconceptions. But can we really confirm our lives as we