Archive Search

  • I have always been deeply interested in the viewer, pondering why some people engage with art while others do not. This curiosity led me to start asking questions directed at the audience. For one project, I asked, "What did you do today?" In this
  • Celestial Mechanics is an artwork intended to be viewed in a planetarium dome. Instead of stars and planets, the ‘night sky’ program reveals many of the aerial technologies hovering, flying, and drifting above us. The project mixes science,
  • The exhibition at the Negev Museum of Art is part of an international project, which originated in 2012 under the title of EDEN (Ethics, Durability, Ecology, Nature). The project is based on the idea of continuing the restoration of the enchanted
  • Data Murmur - video
    The notable Italian political philosopher Franco "Bifo" Berardi recites a random poem of HTML code twice. First on the left of the split screen the camera maintains its distance allowing the bard to enact the poem, his shock of silver hair melting
  • Portrait One -
    Marie, a French-speaking Montrealer in her thirties played by actress Paule Ducharme, appears to be lost in reverie. You may try to get her attention: when selecting "Excuse me..." on the display, Marie suddenly stares at you; then, selecting "Do
  • The White Room is a metaphor that illustrates the Brazilian atmosphere face to the constant changes in the domestic economy. Moreover, it points to the delicate balance between North and South ­- in terms of world geography -- after globalization.
  • Dinosaurus -
    This KU Theatre for Young people production is another step in the University Theatre's ongoing work with virtual reality technology. Director Patrick Carriere, Bemidji, MN, graduate student, and Mark Reaney professor of theatre & Film teamed
  • Opus Zero -
    This work explores memory and reinterpretation: a dinner was organized by the artist at his home, and 5 people were invited to take part of it. The conversation that ensued over the dinner table was recorded, and parts of it were re-enacted by the
  • Julie Freeman works with natural systems and emergent technologies. Her large scale installations and online artworks have, since the early 1990s, pioneered her conceptual and critical approach to working with real-time data as a living and