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  • Curatorial managers: Bruno Latour and Peter Weibel Curator of the web-based projects: Steve Dietz The exhibition Making Things Public addresses the challenge of renewing politics by applying to it the spirit of art and science. This unusual
  • Chamber Remix -
    Event: Chamber RemixInstitution: Kunsthaus RhenaniaComment:
  • Artist: Peter ChamberlainComment:
  • Desert rain -
    In this fascinating piece the company worked in collaboration with the Computer Research Group of the School of Computer Science at Nottingham University, UK. The piece was one of the most complex and powerful responses to the first Gulf War
  • ANGELS - video
    The First Immersive Virtual Reality Movie. "ANGELS" was conceived at MIT & developed at the Hitlab in Seattle. It was completed in December 1991 and recorded on video in January 1992. This revolutionary movie was programmed for the 3 senses: visual,
  • enSight 2006 -
    32 scientists from institutes around the world submitted images from their current work. You can see these images here. 11 British and American artists took up the challenge to dialogue with one of the scientists. The resulting work was exhibited in
  • Artists Martin John Callanan, Corby & Baily and Jonathan Mackenzie, Eunju Han, Eduardo Kac, susan pui san lok, Ruth Maclennan and Uriel Orlow, and Thomson and Craighead What is Metadata? As the exhibition outlines, it is data about data,
  • CHAMBERS - video
    "CHAMBERS" is Stenger's second movie in the Virtual Reality TRILOGY, programmed in web-based VRML, it was also conceived for immersion. Narrative, recurrence, timelessness, all 3 aspects of time are at play, in this emotional progression through
  • DYNASTY - video
    "DYNASTY" is Stenger's third Virtual Reality movie, programmed for web-based VRML, but also conceived for immersion. Synopsis: A child again, you encounter ancestors from a remote past, who welcome you to your Dynasty. Together you will reach
  • “Synthetic images as an answer to Auschwitz” (“We Shall Survive in the Memory of Others”)1 asserted Vilém Flusser (1920–1991) forcefully in an interview shortly before his death. Only by passing through radical abstraction could a new