Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 9 results in 0.008 seconds.

Search results

  1. Public Override Void

    A vault installation featuring Jim Carpenter's Electronic Text Composition (ETC).

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 14:04

  2. Digitale Kunst in der Bibliothek - Digital Art in the Library

    Das Ende des Gutenbergzeitalters ist längst ausgerufen und Medienhistoriker konstatieren eine Entwicklung von Medien des Sinns (Schrift, Buch) zu Medien der Sinne (Fotografie, Film). Der Computer erschien in seiner textbasierten Anfangszeit als Revanche des Wortes am Fernsehen. Inzwischen gibt es Fernsehen auch im Internet. Schlechte Zeiten für den Text? Die neuen Medien führen auch zu neuen Formen der Textnutzung: interaktiv, effektvoll, dekorativ, oft eher darauf aus, mit dem Text zu spielen als ihn zu lesen. Die Ausstellungsreihe "Digitale Kunst in der Bibliothek" zeigt einige davon, beginnend mit "Overboard", einem Beispiel für animierte konkrete Poesie.

    Mittwoch 28. März um 18:15 Uhr 
    im Katalogsaal der UB: Ausstellungseröffnung "Overboard" von John Cayley und Buchvernissage: "Textmaschinen - Kinetische Poesie - Interaktive Installation" von Prof. Dr. Roberto Simanowski. Anschliessend Apéro.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 24.03.2012 - 14:28

  3. PW12 Performance Writing Weekend

    The weekend comprises performances, readings, a workshop on Writing & Mapping, ‘events on the plinth', an exhibition and discussions about multi- and inter-medial writing. We will be considering how, as the printed book comes under threat, new writing will be made, displayed and talked about. See attached PDF full details.

    (Source: www.arnolfioni.org.uk)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.05.2012 - 16:21

  4. places / traces / stories

    Scott Rettberg shows several collaborative projects, made together with Roderick Coover and Nick Montfort. Jeremy Welsh shows Spatial Traces, a video work with sound by Robert Worby, and Places/Traces, a selection of works-in-progress from an ongoing series of investigations of place in video, photography, sound and text. The project consists of several parts, including "SMS Bamboo Forest", an ongoing work combining digital photographs, video and sound, started in 2009 in a Chinese garden in Sydney.  Image below from the series Places/Traces (2010 - 2012) a collection of photographs recording traces and remnants, marks, scarrings, abandoned or discarded items and neglected spaces in the urban environment.

    Scott Rettberg - 05.10.2012 - 14:30

  5. Grand Text Auto Exhibition at the Beall Center for Art and Technology

    What happens when a popular blog crashes into a gallery exhibition? Jump in as the drivers of Grand Text Auto careen toward new fictional forms and modes of play. Grand Text Auto presents six artists wheeling their way to the forefront of digital games and narrative. The artists include Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Mary Flanagan, Michael Mateas, Andrew Stern, Nick Montfort, and Scott Rettberg.

    With collaboration and support from the GVU Center at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts at the University of California, San Diego.

    (Source: Exhibition announcement from the Beall Center)

    Scott Rettberg - 06.12.2012 - 16:10

  6. The Emergence of Electronic Literature

    Electronic literature has emerged as a field of creative practice and academic study over the course of the past several decades. Since the 1990s, the University of Bergen has been one of the central institutional players in the emergence of this field of practice along with peer institutions such as MIT, Brown University, and UCLA. This exhibition, including computers and computer programs, vintage works of electronic literature in original packaging, books, posters and ephemera of events, video documentaries, the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base and the ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature, will serve both to familiarize library patrons with the emergence of this field and with the special role that the University of Bergen has played in its development.

    Scott Rettberg - 17.08.2013 - 01:38

  7. 2014 Electronic Literature Organization: Gallery of E-Literature First Encounters

    The artists featured on Gallery of E-Literature First Encounters were not previously exhibited at a media arts show sponsored by the Electronic Literature Organization. In some cases, this is their first time exhibiting work in any setting.

    (Source: ELO conference website)

    Magnus Lindstrøm - 29.01.2015 - 15:43

  8. PRISM Breakup

    On October 4–6, 2013, Eyebeam hosted the first event of its kind, PRISM Breakup, a series of art and technology events dedicated to exploring and providing forms of protection from surveillance. This event came about in part from Eyebeam’s mission to support the work of artists who critically expose technologies and examine their relationship to society, as well as offering continued support to its alumni following their residencies. The gathering brought together a wide spectrum of artists, hackers, academics, activists, security analysts and journalists for a long weekend of meaningful conversation, hands-on workshops, and an art exhibition that was open October 4–12. (Source: http://prismbreakup.org/)

    Hannah Ackermans - 31.12.2015 - 14:10

  9. Launching the Electronic Literature Collection Vol. 3

    This event was introduced in 18 of February at The Stedman Art Gallery at Rutgers University in Camden. This new ELC - third volume features 114 works from 26 countries in 13 languages. The latest collection, drawn from over 500 submitted and solicited works, represents a wide range of forms and styles, including poem generators, bots, interactive fiction, mobile apps, and more.

    Nikol Hejlickova - 01.09.2016 - 09:36