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  • Gogol Chat -
    The Web is a global text. The hypothetical character, whose speech tends towards this global text, the sum of all speeches of mankind, is called Gogol. Originally GogolChat was conceived as a multi-user chat where this fictitious character lives.
  • Gogota, Hisanori. On the Artists Works (Ulrike Gabriel) Online Publication (1997).
  • Ito, M. and Scott.S. Fisher. Circulating Images of Virtual Systems: Trodes, Gloves and Goggles in Scientific and Popular Cultures In Stereoscopic Displays and Virtual Reality Systems IV, edited by Scott S. Fisher and M.T. Bolas and J. O.
  • Mixed reality installation "COMBATscience Augmented II" is a mixed reality installation that critically reflects on science and its ethical implications, beginning with the gas attacks in World War I and continuing to contemporary research on
  • 2012. Inkjet prints on coated paper, dimensions variable. Life-sized pictures of people found on Google's Street View were printed and posted without authorization at the same spot where they were taken. The posters are printed in color on thin
  • Ryoji Ikeda Exploring a new sensorium Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda creates at the extremes of sound, light and mathematics to produce complex transformative works of singular beauty. In Paris last year he projected vast blinding white light up into
  • Kunstfrühling 2014 -
    Marcello Mercado Van Gogh Variationen Die Installation setzt sich mit der Beziehung zwischen biologischen, technologischen und künstlerischen Formen auseinander. Mittels eines Systems von Datentransformation und –übersetzung, das in der Erschaffung
  • Another Time, Another Space (1993) is an interactive installation devised for Antwerp Central Station, Belgium. The installation used 15 video cameras to capture live images of visitors to the station; 30 computers manipulated the video feeds output
  • Opto-Isolator -
    Opto-Isolator (2007: Golan Levin with Greg Baltus) inverts the condition of spectatorship by exploring the questions: "What if artworks could know how we were looking at them? And, given this knowledge, how might they respond to us?" The sculpture
  • Seeing Double -
    The exhibition is structured primarily around the discourse of vision and optics and centered around a new eight-minute anamorphic film, titled What Will Come (2006), which takes its title from a Ghanaian proverb: "What will come has already come."