Archive Search

  • Watched and Measured -
    "Watched and Measured" is a system that observes, tracks and catalogues people walking through the new Wellcome Wing at the Science Museum in London, UK. It explores the some of the ethical questions surrounding surveillance systems: do they invade
  • Paul Garrin began working with video while studying fine arts at the Cooper Union School of Art in New York. His works over the past 20 years encompass a full spectrum of analog and digital media from video to the Internet, exploring media and the
  • Born in the Japanese city of Fukuoka, media artist Naoko Tosa was awarded a PhD for Art and Technology research by the University of Tokyo in 1999. She gained experience as a lecturer at Musashino Art University in Tokyo from 1989 to 1994. After
  • Sand, Michael. Who´s Afraid of Cyberspace Tate: The Art Magazine 6 (Summer 1995): 36-39.
  • SandScape -
    SandScape is a tangible interface for designing and understanding landscapes through a variety of computational simulations using sand. Users view these simulations as they are projected on the surface of a sand model that represents the terrain.
  • The central element in "Silicon Remembers Carbon" is a large video image projected down onto a bed of sand on the floor of the installation space. In the second version, instead of laser-discs, the video source is made up from 2 streams of MPEG-2
  • Sandquake -
    Air structure event with Theo Botschuijver Shown at TV Gallery Gerry Schum, Camargue, France, 1969. Long lengths of polythene tubing were buried in the sand at a beach in the Camargue in France. This tubing was then slowly inflated so that it
  • Event: Quarxs, dessins et vidéosInstitution: Médiathèque Georges SandComment:
  • Three inflatable pavilions, each having a specific function, were specially commissioned for Sonsbeek buiten de perken. Besides the Information Pavilion, an air supported semi-sphere covered with sythetic grass, and the Video Studio, a tensile
  • Auditorium
    The Auditorium was the world’s first two-level air-supported structure. With two sets of revolving doors, the ground level could operate at a higher pressure than the upper level. This was necessary to support the weight of people sitting on its