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  • Cloud - video
    "Cloud" is a monumental kinetic installation hanging suspended in the Great Hall at the Ontario Science Centre. One hundred identical sculptural elements, arranged in ten by ten grid, are rotated at slightly differing speeds by computer-controlled
  • Whirl -
    Skaters, late in the day, late in the year, circling the rink at Toronto City Hall.
  • Malina, Roger. Leonardo (Journal of the International Society of Arts, Sciences and Technology) Volume 34 Number 4. Skull on the Cover. Vol.34. 4, 4 th ed.Boston: Leonardo MIT Press, 2001.
  • Malina, Roger. Leonardo (Journal of the International Society of Arts, Sciences and Technology) Volume 34 Number 4. Skull on the Cover. Vol.34. 4, 4 th ed.Boston: Leonardo MIT Press, 2001.
  • d12 2007 The exhibition devised by artistic director Roger M. Buergel and curator Ruth Noack featuring work by 109 artists from 43 countries was visited by 754,301 paying guests. There were also 4,390 professionals and 15,537 journalists from 52
  • The second in the series, "Plot Against Time #2 (flurry)", tracks individual snowflakes whirling in the complex turbulence created by the rigorous and minimal forms of Mies van der Rohe's Toronto Dominion Centre skyscrapers and the Al McWilliams
  • David Rokeby, born 1960, studied at the Ontario College of Art. He is a pioneer in interactive art and an acknowledged innovator in interactive technologies. The technology Rokeby developed for this work is widely used by composers, choreographers,
  • .. interested in the poetry and metaphysics of new technologies. He has created a series of award-winning works that probe the expressive power of new technologies to ask questions about the world ..
  • Nuzzle Afar -
    "Nuzzle" is a shared 3D virtual environment art work, using digital networking technology. It realizes a new type of communication space where people can meet and talk to each other as avatars from several telematic immersive computer terminals.
  • SeeBanff! - video
    SEE BANFF! is an interactive stereoscopic installation. It bears a strong - and intentional - resemblance to an Edison kinetoscope, which made its public debut one hundred years ago in April 1894. It achieved instant popularity, but was short-lived.