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  • ATTRACTIONS -
    video 2′ 'The latest research within the artist’s already distinguished paradigm has brought a few novelties. In the field of phisical laws the stress is on experimentig with magnetism and as far as the complex levels of her works of art are
  • In Origins and Futures, pyrite, a mineral commonly known as “fool’s gold” glimmers with novelty and seduction. Its crystalline structure and reflecting light attracts the viewer’s eye without hesitation. The piece is based on A.G. Cairns-Smith’s
  • Biggs, Simon and James Leach. Autopoeisis: Novelty, Meaning and Valve. London: Artwords Press, 2004.
  • "Body Movies" transforms public space with 400 to 1,800 square metres of interactive projections. Thousands of photo portraits taken on the streets of the cities where the project is exhibited are shown using robotically controlled projectors.
  • "Amodal Suspension" is a large-scale interactive installation developed for the opening of the Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (YCAM) in Japan. From the 1st to the 24th of November 2003 people could use the project website http://www.amodal.net
  • Vera Plastica -
    "Vera Plastica" is a generative augmented reality (AR) installation inspired by Vera Molnar's generative grid compositions, in which she uses algorithms to determine random variations in the geometry and color of a thematic form, which progress in
  • The Unemployed -
    The Unemployed is an interactive installation that visualizes worldwide unemployment, depicting the jobless as animated figures moving in an abstract representation of urban space. Viewers movements are tracked and their silhouettes are replaced by
  • The digital collages (3 shown here by Tamiko Thiel, and 3 others by Teresa Reuter/Sabe Wunsch) show scenographies of the Berlin Wall that are conceived as associative spaces of memories - by mixing temporal and geographical elements as well as
  • Zareei, Mo. Audiovisual Materialism Organised Sound 25, no. 3 (November 2020): 362-371.
  • Underglow -
    Underglow illuminated a number of separate gullies (drains) in the vicinity of Guildhall Yard, King Street and Queen Street and were visible from dusk to dawn from November 2005 until February 2006. Source: Susan Collins