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  • Bernd Lintermann works as artist and scientist in the field of real time computer graphics with a strong focus on interactive and generative systems. The results of his research are applied in the scientific, creative and commercial context. His
  • Pikapika -
    Meet Pikapika--a character influenced by anime and manga; Japanese pop animation and comics. Pikapika embodies movements from bunraku (puppet theater), a movement vocabulary Tomie Hahn studied while learning nihon buyo (Japanese traditional dance)
  • QUARXS 90S
    At the beginning of the 90s, Quarxs was the very first 3D graphics HD TV series widely awarded as a pioneer TV program. Conceived in collaboration with comics author Francois Schuiten and Benoît Peeters, it has become a reference in the history of
  • Manifesting randomness ​ Alexandra Ehrlich-Speiser creates manifestations of the random. Using arbitrary decisions and consciously brought about glitches in machines and digital systems she creates poetic experiences that recontextualize the
  • Event: ANIME Japanese Comics GlobalInstitution: Japanese-German Center BerlinComment:
  • Anthroposcope Concept Anthroposcope is an interactive installation involving a microscope, a real plant and a fingertip pulse sensor. The heart bit sensor being clipped onto the visitor's fingertip, he or she can explore through the viewfinder of
  • Dr. Jeffrey Huang is Associate Professor of Architecture, Digital Media and Information Technology at Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD), and since 2003 also at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS). Huang's teaching focuses on the
  • Mark J. Stock is an artist, scientist, and programmer who creates still and moving images combining elements of nature, physics, chaos, computation, and algorithm. His works explore the tension between the natural world and its simulated
  • Emergences of Continuous Forms was one of a series of performances and installations in this period which explored various methods of extending the cinematic image into the space of the viewers and of provoking the viewer's physical
  • Watch Out! -
    The World wide Panoptikon increases global exposure. Is Big Watcher b[r]othering us? Should we be afraid of being seen or should we enjoy the World's transparency as a way of proclaiming everyone's difference? In Watch Out!