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  • Patrick is a conceptual artist, curator, and theorist exploring how media shape our perception of reality as well as the borders between the digital and the materal. He is best known for his work with the virtual reality performance art group Second
  • Back to Back -
    Two people, watching Blind Love Ready Made are sitting, earphones on, in front of their show, generated abstract shapes moving at the rythm of an invisible couple orgasmic vocalizations. This solitary pleasure is only disturbed by the fact to
  • "Shapes in Maia" ( Photography )Artist: German GomezComment:
  • X
    The unknown X becomes a whole symphony of shapes... In a universe where everything is by itself yet can intersect with each other, cross-action seems the best way to solve an unknown equation.
  • der zeresser -
    leo peschta der zermesser, 2007 Robot Der Zermesser is an autonomous object whose purpose is to feel its way around and to articulate the relation between its own form and its surroundings. Each side and each corner are autonomous entities. The
  • Vera Plastica -
    "Vera Plastica" is a generative augmented reality (AR) installation inspired by Vera Molnar's generative grid compositions, in which she uses algorithms to determine random variations in the geometry and color of a thematic form, which progress in
  • San Marco Flow -
    "San Marco Flow" layers all the actions of people and pigeons on Piazza San Marco in Venice into a pair of evolving images representing two views of the recent history of activities there. The images are, in effect, lit by animate presence; things
  • Paper accepted: Contemporary Immersive Strategies of Digital Arts: Emilio Vavarella and its Contemporaries. Conference canceled due to pandemic.
  • Performers interact with images and sounds and manipulate four mobile projection surfaces, orchestrating a set of changing architectural constructions. Spectators circulate freely like visitors to an installation, accessing multiple points of view
  • For his 2007 work Machine for Taking Time (boul. St-Laurent), David Rokeby recorded thousands of images of the city of Montreal from identical points of view every day for a year. In Murmurscape (Montreal), letter-shaped fragments excised from this