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  • Homunculus Agora -
    homunculus agora (h.a) is a large-scale architectonic installation of several dozen sculptural bodies (homunculi) that are organized in a fluid-like cluster, appearing at the Markham Museum in the Land|Slide Possible Futures exhibit from September
  • Artist-philosopher, Hervé Fischer graduated from the école Normale Supérieure (rue d'Ulm, Paris). For many years he taught sociology of communication and culture at the Sorbonne. He obtained its MBA in philosophy and PhD. in sociology. A multi-media
  • Event: Business Upper Austria in Munich organized by Ars ElectronicaInstitution: Business Upper Austria Comment:
  • Event: Business Upper Austria in Berlin organized by Ars ElectronicaInstitution: Business Upper Austria Comment:
  • Event: Transgenesis - Round Table with Christa Sommerer, Louis Bec, Jens Hauser, Louis-Marie Houdebine, Roger Malina, and Franco Torriani at the Artistic Mobility Days in Prague organized by CIANT, The Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,
  • Jenny Holzer was born in Gallipolis, Ohio, in 1950. She received a BA from Ohio University in Athens (1972); an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence (1977); and honorary doctorates from the University of Ohio (1993), the Rhode
  • South African draughtsman, film maker and sculptor William Kentridge studied at the Johannesburg Art Foundation and the Ecole Jacques Lecoq in Paris. In 1998, a major retrospective exhibition opened at the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels. A second
  • 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
  • Não!
    "Não!" is organized in text blocks which circulate in virtual space at equal intervals, leaving the screen blank prior to the flow of the next text block. The visual rhythm thus created alternates between appearance and disappearance of the
  • Storms
    An interactive hypertext piece based on the sefirotic tree of the Kabbalah. "Storms" is organized in vocalic and consonantal bifurcations. To navigate through the poem one is invited to click on a letter at any given time. In some instances,