Archive Search

  • Partner: Dmitry Gelfand Camera Lucida creates a fleeting ephemeral materiality by intersecting ultrasound with hyperlight, in essence it creates an unstable sonic aurora. Developed in collaboration with numerous physics research labs the
  • ADA Artist Interview with Elke ReinhuberArchive of Digital Art, March 2022Text & Interview by Carla Zamorahttps://www.digitalartarchive.at/features/featured-artists/featured-elke-reinhuber.htmlWhat have you been working on recently?As I
  • Research into the nontraditional materials of sculpture has accompanied my artistic career in the search for the relation between the work and the exhibition site understood as social sphere, architectural context or an urban space. A work of art
  • Secret Detours -
    The 360° video »Secret Detours« served as an immediate approach to digitally preserve a Chinese garden in Singapore. Currently, my collaborators Benjamin Seide, Ross Wiliams and myself have developed a range of different versions in order to explore
  • La experiencia que tenemos de las cosas (tangibles e intangibles) se compone de acciones simples enlazadas a símbolos que encontramos en el mundo. Imprimimos estas experiencias a distintas áreas de nuestro cerebro y luego, de alguna manera, perdemos
  • Partner: Evelina Domnitch Camera Lucida creates a fleeting ephemeral materiality by intersecting ultrasound with hyperlight, in essence it creates an unstable sonic aurora. Developed in collaboration with numerous physics research labs the
  • Pathway A
    Pathway Series. 29" by 23", 2000. Algorithmic pen and ink drawing on paper with 2 gold leaf elements. In this work the "all-over" distributions are linear random walks with numerous iterations. The text-like inscription is an
  • Pathway B
    Pathway Series. 29" by 23", 2000. Algorithmic pen and ink drawing on paper with 2 gold leaf elements. In this work the "all-over" distributions are linear random walks with numerous iterations. The text-like inscription is an
  • Dmitry Gelfand (b.1974, St. Petersburg, Russia) and Evelina Domnitch (b. 1972, Minsk, Belarus) create sensory immersion environments that merge physics, chemistry and computer science with uncanny philosophical practices. Current findings,
  • ‘This one’s for the farmer’ encompasses five bodies of work. Each set of work has been produced with the farming community as a partner. While the title seems to exclude the art viewer, the whole body of work is about enticing viewers to take a