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  • 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
  • Since 2004 - Curriculum designer and senior lecturer for Interactive Media and Creative Arts modules at Department of Art Theory and Practice, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. 2008-2016: Cyber Hub Leader at Inter-Disciplinary.Net, Oxford,
  • Karl Salzmann (*1979 in Bludenz) is a sound and media artist currently based in Vienna. In his artistic practice he uses sound and noise and combines them in performance, conceptual and installation art. His work is characterized by the visual
  • 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,
  • Stenslie Stahl is working on the development of different interface technologies and tools for the digital culture within the fields of art, media and network-research. Lives and works as media artist, curator, scientist and media researcher in Oslo
  • HyperKult 14 -
    »HyperKult - Computer as Medium« takes place as an annual (non-profit and no-budget) symposium since 1990. Hyper(media)Kult(ur) was an at this time an upcoming field of research across the borderline of technical and cultural disciplines. HyperKult
  • The VII Symposium on Virtual Reality is an international forum, sponsored by (SBC), and organized by SENAC - SP , which brings together researchers, practitioners, students, and other professionals concerned with the advances and applications of
  • Anamorph-Lattice, 6 black-white family snapshots repeated 30 times are organized by the Voronoi mathematical model so that the images disrupt the frontal perspective viewing, creating altered perspectives reminiscent of 16th and 17th century
  • “On the Road”, consists of twelve lenticular panels that explore the cinematic narrative potential of the photographic image in non-electronic form. The exhibition’s title “On The Road” makes reference to the defining work of the Beat Generation’s