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  • GEORGE LEGRADYFrom analog to digitalThe Archive of Digital Art, 05/2023Text & Interview by Alejandro Quiñones Roa“George Legrady’s work spans almost four decades and incorporates a range fromanalog photography to digital interactive
  • Escher Girl -
    Archival Digital Print, Sizes: 8”x10” and 13”x19” Pigment Inks on cotton rag substrate or Light Jet digital photo prints. (Also available larger custom sizes or NFT by special order) Date created: March 2002 Victor: This is a portrait of a woman who
  • .. Her art works reflect on urbanity and community as seen through digital media and have been exhibited worldwide at festivals and museums..
  • On 9 January 2024 we celebrate 20 years of UpStage! UpStage has playfully persisted for two decades of cyberformance adventures. Since its launch on 9 January 2004, UpStage has provided an accessible, artist-led online venue for collaboration,
  • The 10th Birthday of UpStage was celebrated on 9-10 January 2014 with three performances, a symposium on remote collaboration, a planning meeting and the launch of UpStage v3. The event was supported by CityLink (who provided free wifi), the venue
  • An Australian electronic musician, video artist and electronic engineer. "I have been active in video production since 1974. My first involvement was with Bush Video and the Paddington Video Access Centre where I learnt video editing and technical
  • .. explore the potential of the human body to be an audio-visual instrument ..
  • George Legrady has exhibited across the world and is widely recognized as one of the early digital artists that researched the semiotic and cultural implications of software-produced images. His work encompasses a wide range of digital experiments
  • ADA Artist Interview with Suzanne AnkerArchive of Digital Art, September 2021Full text and interview by Carla Zamora on ADA:https://www.digitalartarchive.at/features/featured-artists/featured-artist-suzanne-anker.htmlYou are considered being a
  • The Quarxs -
    First of all, the QUARXS are characters in a series of twelve computer animated films of three minutes each. Each one presents itself as a program of popularized science: the narrator, a scientist (a researcher in "comparative cryptobiology"), takes