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  • Chen Yun-Ju is a New Media Artist from Taiwan. Her interests include art and technology, philosophy, interactive media, and embodiment. Her work spans multiple fields including video, installation, and performance art to express personal emotions
  • Fifteen points (XV) defines the role of cognitive dissonance in diverse reactive spaces. In an interactive floor projection, viewers are encouraged to move throughout the space and engage in the manipulation of the art piece. Detecting both sound
  • The leading theme of the WRO 01 Biennale, SCREENS expresses the character of the media art's present state. On one hand it seems appealed by fast development of cognitive horisons and expression of new communication spaces, and on the other
  • Garavaglia, J. and C. Robles. WOODEN WORLDS – Aesthetical and Technical aspects of a Multimedia Performance using Real-time Interaction. proceedidings ISEA , no. 2011 (2011).
  • Garavaglia, J. and C. Robles. WOODEN WORLDS – Aesthetical and Technical aspects of a Multimedia Performance using Real-time Interaction. proceedidings ISEA , no. 2011 (2011).
  • Gigliotti, Carol. Women and the Aesthetics of New Media trAce, Online Writing Centre (June 2003).
  • The selection of Internet-based art for the 2002 Biennial strives to give an impression of the variety of forms that net art can take and of the multiple themes that have emerged over the years. These forms range from alternative browsers and
  • WHITE CUBE alpha exhibition The Age of Experience curated by Harald Kraemer, CMC Gallery, School of Creative Media City University, Hong Kong Seeking the common denominator of all contemporary artworks, in spite of their spectacular diversity, the
  • Seeking the common denominator of all contemporary artworks, in spite of their spectacular diversity, the artist found that it should be the very perfume of the art gallery, freshly repainted, before the exhibition opening. White Cube is first an
  • 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