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  • This installation features the debut of an important new addition to the SCMA collection, “What Will Come” (2006), a major film by the South African artist William Kentridge. One of the most innovative aspects of Kentridge’s work is his hand-drawn
  • Event: What You See is Not What You GetInstitution: Run Run Shaw Creative Media CentreComment:
  • Huhtamo, Erkki. What's Victoria Got to Do with It? Toward an Archaeology of Domestic Video Gaming In Before the Crash: Early Video Game History, edited by Mark J. P. Wolf, 30-52. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2012.
  • Hirsch, Andreas. What´s the Matter with the Institutions of Art? / Was ist mit den Institutionen der Kunst los? In Ars Electronica 2001: Takeover. Wer macht die Kunst von morgen? / Who´s doing the art of tomorrow?, edited by Gerfried Stocker and
  • Installation using real-time computer simulation. When you depict the movement of parts of the human body in a time/value co-ordinate system, you get various wave forms; in the case of repetitive movement, sine waves. During movement, most parts of
  • Aceti, Lanfranco. When Aesthetic Is Not Just a Pretty Picture: Paolo Cirio's Social Actions Leonardo Electronic Almanac 20, no. 1 (January 2014): 232-249.
  • When I Dream -
    Who am I when I dream? How many different lives do I live in my sleep? Where do those lives go when I wake? Where do those selves go when I wake?
  • Weinberger, David. When Things Aren´t What They Are / Wenn Dinge nicht sind, was sie sind In Ars Electronica 2005 : HYBRID - Living in Paradox, edited by Gerfried Stocker and Christine SchöpfOstfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2005.
  • Where are you from?_Stories / Version 09 Date: 2009 Materials: interactive media installation. Measurements: variable (black box) Other information: Group exhibition held at: Espacio Fundación Telefónica, Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 8th –
  • Where are you from?_Stories, 2002-2009, is a net-art piece supported by a one-year research grant from the Canada Council for the Arts. The videos for the net-art piece were selected from approximately 200 15-minute videos captured in special events