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  • Jack Holmer and the aesthetic of affect In search of technological Affective Poetics, the artist wanders the form, trying to visualize that which lacks connection, interaction and support. This happens in the Stratosphere, in Physical Mountains,
  • Del Favero, Dennis and Neil Brown and Jeffery Shaw and Weibel, Peter. Interactive Narrative as a Form of Recombinatory Search in the Cinematic Transcription of Televisual Information. : 2003.
  • A [hidden] transmission device, using Bluetooth protocols, continually searches for visible and open devices (mobile phones, laptops, PDAs etc) within an area. On discovering an open device, a simple message is sent, reading: “I am still alive”*. I
  • The interactive 3D virtual reality installation "The Travels of Mariko Horo" is a reverse Marco Polo fantasy imagining the fictitious Mariko Horo as a Japanese time-traveler searching for the Western Paradise of Buddhist mythology, the Isles of the
  • Nils Jean. Digital Debris in Internet Art: A Resistance to the Epistemology of Search in Ekprhasis Vol. 10, Issue 2/2013 'Recyling Images' Ekphrasis Vol. 10, no. Issue 2 (2013): 212-221.
  • Medi@terra 2000 -
    Neo[techno]logisms The neologism NEOTECHNOLOGISM, for Medi@terra 2000, is a starting-point for a series of activities which aspire to escape from the meanings which define them, in search for a new identity. This is not a festival (ceci n'est
  • Sonar 2010
    Sónar is the festival of advanced music and multimedia art that takes place at various venues in Barcelona (Spain) in the third week of June since 1994. Sónar is a pioneering festival that is unique in terms of its format and content: a leading
  • n an information-based age, the ability to search and organize information amounts to power. Search engines shape knowledge, modulate web traffic, and contribute to the creation of new semantics and meanings. Currently, Google's influence is
  • Weintraub, Linda. Art on the Edge and Over: Searching for Art´s Meaning in Contemporary Society, 1970-1990s. New York: Art Insights Inc., 1996.
  • In a time characterised by the loss of utopia and by major social and political change, creativity was called for – this was where artistic and philosophical concepts became increasingly important for creating new perspectives. Not the answer, but