Archive Search

  • it feels like home -
    “It feels like home” is an online intervention that uses the synthetic space of the browser as a stage to unfold an interactive, performative and generative virtual experience. Experimenting with the notion of time during a pandemic and isolation,
  • .. making visible that which is not before our eyes, that which is not directly evident nor exposed to the view ..
  • GARDEN CONCEPT In the context of the Regional STARTS Centers in Greece, the non-profit platform for social innovation projects MADE GROUP, with the support of the Athens Tech College and the Cultural Association of Archilochus of Paros, sets the
  • After Pey-Chwen Lin completed the “Making of Eve Clone I”, she created an interactive installation, the “Great Image of Eve Clone”, to further explore the relationship between humans and Eve Clone — the way a human gave life to Eve Clone is similar
  • After Pey-Chwen Lin completed the “Making of Eve Clone I”, she created an interactive installation, the “Great Image of Eve Clone”, to further explore the relationship between humans and Eve Clone — the way a human gave life to Eve Clone is similar
  • Sweet, Paula. What Is Between Us: A Visual Survey of Nina Sobell's work 2007- 2019. Vicenza, Italy: Second Guess Press, Amazon, 2020.
  • 2020 “ART WOMEN International Exhibition”, PPLG, Italy
  • Augenschein — a light installation for the Stieglerhaus, St. Stefan ob Stainz, AT The eye has always played a vital role in human history, whether as the organ of vision or as a pivotal cultural symbol in the arts of all ages. In digital and new
  • The immersive installation site-inflexion invites visitors to take part in a site-specific virtual and acoustic journey. The scenery and soundscapes of the JKU campus are the main actors in the work, alluding to Johannes Kepler’s activity as a
  • The immersive installation site-inflexion invites visitors to take part in a site-specific virtual and acoustic journey. The scenery and soundscapes of the JKU campus are the main actors in the work, alluding to Johannes Kepler’s activity as a