Archive Search

  • Invisible Cantilever -
    ... to the telescope to the atomic force microscope; each new technology raises questions about what is real versus what is an artifact of the viewing process. For example, how does the framed vision of the microscope differ from the framing induced by the...
  • Under Fire -
    ...UNDER FIRE is an ongoing art and research project that explores militarization and political violence. It delves into the structural, symbolic, and affective dimensions of armed conflicts: the organization, representation, and materialization of war. At the...
  • ...Weintraub, Annette. Artifice, Artifact, The Landscape of the Constructed Digital Environment Leonardo 28, no. 5 (1995): 365-366.
  • Curator: Julian Stadon
  • ...Mercury Project combined robotics and archaeology in an interactive art installation. To our knowledge, the Mercury Project was the first system that allowed WWW users to remotely view and alter the real world via tele-robotics. Users excavated artifacts buried in a...
  • Spectropia -
    ... as if seen through a looking glass of dimly remembered and mutated images. We are in the future in England, 2099, a world of artificial surfaces where knowledge spans only a person's experience and recorded history is forbidden. This culture of...
  • Things Spoken -
    ...Most people collect objects during their lives. These can be gifts, souvenirs, momentos, personal artifacts, found things, etc. Their significance for their 'collectors' are usually contextual and personal. This CD-ROM presents a selection of about 50...
  • Bricks -
    ... Interface which allows direct control of electronic or virtual objects through physical handles for control. These physical artifacts are essentially new input devices which can be tightly coupled or “attached” to virtual objects for manipulation or for...
  • Advent -
    ... images from along the waterfront and its hinterland, depicting the strangeness inherent in a close examination of urban artifacts. Showing a sequence of details of the architecture, machinery and monuments of late 20th century England, at the end of the...
  • ... the ungraspable in a world that we experience daily. It poetically explores our existence, placing the human being and human artifacts within a natural structure that is intrinsically active, interconnected, and unified.