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  • Bennett, Jane. Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Vol.1. ohn Hope Franklin Center Book, 1 th ed.United States of America: Duke University Press, 2010.
  • "Now when things have lost their common sense contemplation holds us together"
  • Instant Places is a software fiction that creates a networked formed ad hoc to connect dispersed data places. These data places can stretch over multiple computers and also multiple network systems. They are not bound by geography, time and space.
  • Continuum
    Continuum is a mirror that "captures" anything that moves before it. Anything that does not move is not reflected but is lost in the inky blackness of the background of the screen image. Continuum is a "mirror" that "reflects" things as both a
  • We are at the edge between human need and human greed. No need to be inside the Matrix to see that the world is covered with data quantifying all human activities into convertible and interpretable figures. As the new part of the Mechanics of
  • In a world where human transactions mostly apply to human values, where metaphors reside in the syntactic articulation of these values, we may find very peculiar layers of truth that make sense in an unexpected way. Transactional Poetry is
  • Laufende Projekte -
    Video installation [English title, Ongoing Projects] "The projection of a sequence of images onto a ball and, as a consequence, the wall behind it, results in the juxtaposition of two projection surfaces. Whereas the ball displays a focused but
  • Peter grew up around the world, studied math, and liked to build things. Using math to make pictures led him to computers, which led to trying to “get the darn things to generate pretty images easily”. Still striving for that goal, with a day job at
  • Robert Lazzarini is an American artist who lives and works in New York. Primarily a sculptor, Robert is best known for making common objects that have been subjected to compound distortions which have the effect of confusing visual and haptic
  • Frohne, Ursula. Agnes Hegedues: Their Things Spoken In Future Cinema. The Cinematic Imaginary after Film, edited by Jeffrey Shaw and Peter Weibel, 336-339. Cambridge, MASS: The MIT Press, 2003.