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  • Equipements which exchange views between two persons. You can only see through the other person's eyes when you wear these machines, which forcibly put you in the other's place. These were made to obscure the border between identities of
  • Mega Diary
    Open Diary project to understand the unrelated person. This is a project which opens many people's everyday lives to the public through computer networking. Participants write down diaries on a bulletin board on internet for 100 days. This
  • WRINGER/WASHER TV is a pink, white and chrome wringer washer which has a colour monitor fitted in the bottom of the wash tub facing up. This installation deals with the issue of abortion in Canada, interspersing opinions and arguments with video
  • A Light Rain -
    Viewers take an umbrella, walk into the rainbow, and hear music played by water streams. (source: www.well.com/~demarini)
  • Tongues of Fire -
    Film recordings of vibrating flames represent the articulations of speech, based on 19th century manometric flame devices. (source: www.well.com/~demarini)
  • n-Cha(n)t -
    The surface inspiration for "n-Cha(n)t" was a strong and somewhat inexplicable desire to hear a community of computers speaking together: chattering amongst themselves, musing, intoning chants... "n-cha(n)t" is a community of "Givers of Names"
  • Live audio-visual transformation and dematerialization of the viewer. [prototype] (source: http://www.zakros.com/projects/narcissus/index.html)
  • Westway -
    A video installation work focusing on the mythology of violence in contemporary London. The work is both autobiographical and fictional and depicts a violent assault. The work was part of three works. (source: http://www.grahamnicholls.com/)
  • TI -
    C.E.B. Reas lives and works in Los Angeles. His work focuses on defining processes and translating them into visualisations. Since 2001, he has developed Processing, an open-source programming environment, with Ben Fry. Both Reas and Fry have
  • Marchtowar -
    Online gambling meets political protest. Launched in the February 2003, Marchtowar.com allowed users to place $5 bets on the time and date when the US invasion of Iraq would begin. The winner was paid in pre-paid gasoline cards, all proceeds went to