Archive Search

  • Figment
    Figment offers an experience of the digital sublime, which overlaps with our perception of the digital, landscape, our relationship with each, and the fundamental questions that follow, peering into the nature of our existence. In Figment, rendered
  • The piece, being a part of the show “It’s Two Minutes to Midnight,” provides viewers with an educational journey on humankind’s history of de- and re-nuclearization. The show, organized by Weinberg/Newton Gallery in collaboration with the Bulletin
  • BODYGAZE
    Acryl, pastel on papervariable dimensions. Graphical images on paper combine structures that look like microscopic imagery and the morphology of bodily particles. The bodily tissue is mediated in a variety of observation ratios: from stylised
  • PULSATION
    The video work Pulsation presents pulsating light phenomena, the bodily and the technologically generated hybrid as a luminous apparition composed by layering reflected light, video projections of radiological scans of the artist’s brain and related
  • NET(WORK) -
    The projetct is dedicated to the phenomenon of nets. As we know, nets are some of the primary means for catching aquatic bioresources. The net thrives as a universal symbol with many possible applications and analogies. The word “net” – set’ – can
  • “Matrix XII Krems” connects the new State Gallery of Lower Austria and the Kunsthalle Krems in a vast space below ground. The individual lights are arranged in a strict square grid on a slanted plane and delineate the border between emptiness and
  • Lozano-Hemmer, Rafael. Perverting Technological Correctness Leonardo Electronic Almanac / Leonardo Art Gallery 29, no. 1 (1996).
  • Penny, Simon. Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace In Critical Issues in Electronic Media, edited by Simon PennyAlbany, NY: Suny Press, 1995.
  • Penny, Simon. Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace In Critical Issues in Electronic Media, edited by Simon Penny, 47-74. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1995.
  • Jack Holmer and the aesthetic of affect In search of technological Affective Poetics, the artist wanders the form, trying to visualize that which lacks connection, interaction and support. This happens in the Stratosphere, in Physical Mountains,