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  • Tiia Johannson was a media artist, educator and researcher based in Tallinn, Estonia. Her background was in fine arts and moving image, since1990 she has mostly been working on numerous media art projects on video, multimedia and Information Society
  • The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto (MoMAK), is pleased to announce on the behalf of the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (MOMAT) and the Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art (Hiroshima MOCA) the upcoming exhibition, William
  • Event: Urban Media War. the war for Attention, What Urban Digital Art Can Do?Institution: Human Vibration, Hong Kong Arts Development CouncilComment:
  • Event: "Aesthetics, Politics and Economics of Attention. The New Role of the Artist in Public Space at the Digital Era", "Transformation, Innovation, and Leap Development"Institution: BIT’s 1st Annual Global Congress of Knowledge Economy 2014
  • The foundation of my work has always begun with the photograph, which has been rightly considered a “moment” often effectively standing as a singular, self-contained expression. Although this is certainly one important aspect of photography, it has
  • After studies of Philosophy and esthetic theory in Frankfurt und Paris (1988-1992) a short intermezzo followed as scientific assistant at Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt am Main. 1992 starting artistic practice with the projekt "Human
  • Event: INTERCONNECT@between attention and immersionInstitution: ZKM - Center for Art and MediaComment:
  • Cracks to Oases -
    The book describes my personal observations during the workshop Ingrutatti Palermo as part of ‹Manifesta 12› in July 2018. In the course of these 10 days, I was part of a group of artists and architects from around the world. Sara Kamalvand’s
  • “I'm sorry I made you feel that way” is an interactive experience and performative self-portrait exploring new possibilities for empathy and care for our hybrid selves. Martina Menegon’s biometric data collected daily via a wearable smart ring
  • This essay by former research assistant Isabella Iska at the Center for Image Science, is a tribute to the artist, scholar, professor and permanent driven inventor Charles Csuri (1922-2022), who began creating digital artworks in the 1960s. Today