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  • Event: Atom, Bit, Coin, Transactional Art Between Sublimation and ReificationInstitution: Art Machines: International Symposium on Computational Media ArtComment:
  • Invisible Cantilever -
    This project considers the distance between the viewer and what is being viewed. How does technology alter our perceptions of distance, scale, and structure? Technologies for viewing continue to evolve, from the camera obscura to the telescope to
  • nano -
    a Media Arts & Science Exhibition Making Nanoscience Visible, Tangible, and Experiential for Visitors of All Ages nano - an exhibition that merges the arts and the atom by presenting the world of nanoscience through a participatory aesthetic
  • Nano-Scape - video
    This nano-scale sculpture is invisible, just like the Nano-world it comments about. While science and media try to capture images of these tiniest of particles in order to understand their properties, Nano-Scape tries to make this Nano-world
  • A visual/sonic installation that immerses the viewer in quantum phenomenon. Quantum Consciousness is an audio-visualisation of atomic data which indexes the quantum “movement” of an electron. This project delivers an aesthetic and immersive
  • The piece, being a part of the show “It’s Two Minutes to Midnight,” provides viewers with an educational journey on humankind’s history of de- and re-nuclearization. The show, organized by Weinberg/Newton Gallery in collaboration with the Bulletin
  • Curator: José Ramón Pérez Ornia; Artists: Marina Abramovic, Chantal Akerman, Max Almy, Julián Álvarez, Richard Angers, Ida Applebroog & Beth B, Eugènia Balcells, Irit Batsry, Robert Breer, Brothers Qualy (Stephen y Timothy Quay), Carl Browm, Robert
  • superposition -
    Superposition is a project about the way we understand the reality of nature on an atomic scale and is inspired by the mathematical notions of quantum mechanics. Performers will appear in his piece for the first time, performing as
  • The PHSCologram is a homage to 'Have a Nice Day' produced in 2002 by Ellen Sandor in collaboration with Martyl Langsdorf’ the author of Doomsday Clock, originally designed for the cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists magazine in 1947. The
  • The scenery referring to Martyl Langsdorf’s painting "Doomsday Clock Have a nice day" is contrasted with Martyl’s Doomsday Clock which she originally designed for the cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists magazine in 1947. The “Bulletin”,