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  • Ryoji Ikeda Exploring a new sensorium Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda creates at the extremes of sound, light and mathematics to produce complex transformative works of singular beauty. In Paris last year he projected vast blinding white light up into
  • ADA Artist Interview 10/2020BILL SEAMAN – transdisciplinary explorations of meaning production and the process ofcreativityWhat are your current projects?I tend to work on many different things simultaneously, shifting from one to the other.
  • ADA Artist Interview with Victor AcevedoArchive of Digital Art, November 2021Full text and interview by Alejandro Quiñones on ADA:https://www.digitalartarchive.at/features/featured-artists/featured-artist-victor-acevedo.htmlWhat are your current
  • GEORGE LEGRADYFrom analog to digitalThe Archive of Digital Art, 05/2023Text & Interview by Alejandro Quiñones Roa“George Legrady’s work spans almost four decades and incorporates a range fromanalog photography to digital interactive
  • Adriano Abbado has always been interested in non-verbal communication. In 1972 he made his first experiments with photography and environmental sounds. In 1977 he graduated in Electronic Music Composition at the Conservatory of Milan. In 1981 he
  • Airground -
    The Airgrounds were a new genre of air structures comprising soft, responsive architectures the public could interact with. At the Brighton Festival a pyramid-shaped inflatable with a transparent outer skin and yellow inner skin, partially inflated
  • AME: Art After Museum -
    an art collection concieved by contemporary artists for virtual reality OPUS IN MACHINA > IMAGO EX MACHINA ART EXPLORER : AN ACTIVE SPECTATOR Milestones for an Art After Museum Is there thing such as Art After Museum ? Cosa Mentale Back to
  • Curated by Mark Skwarek
  • A virtual reality murder mystery - part movie, part performance - was created at The Banff Centre for the Arts in Canada, in collaboration with Michael Mackenzie. It is an immersive interactive narrative piece. It combines interactive computer
  • In this geolocative augmented reality installation, a grid of ARt critics seem to scream "You call THIS ARt???" On October 9 2010, Sander Veenhof & Mark Skwarek organized "We AR in MoMA," an uninvited cyberspace takeover of the Museum of Modern Art