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  1. Ben Samuel

    Computer scientist and game designer with a PhD from University of California, Santa Cruz. As of 2024 he is an associate professor at the University of New Orleans.

    Audun Andreassen - 03.04.2013 - 15:31

  2. Jennifer Smith

    Jennifer Smith teaches in the Media, Art, and Text program at Virginia Commonwealth University. She has a BA in English from the University of Virginia and an MA and PhD in English literature from VCU. Her current research focus is on the intersection of new media literature and the application of traditional literary techniques (Source: Author).

    Jennifer Smith now goes under the name of Jennifer Roudadush.

    Audun Andreassen - 10.04.2013 - 12:41

  3. Kenneth Calhoun

    Kenneth Calhoun is an Assistant Professor of Graphic Design and Chair of the Art and Graphic Design Department at Lasell College. He has served as Assistant Professor of Interactive Media at Elon University for the past three years; prior to that he was a visiting professor at Duke University, where he taught a course called Digital Storytelling. He served as a creative director, designer and writer/director in various organizations during the 1990s, working with Fortune 500, music and hospitality industry clients. His creative work includes documentary filmmaking, interactive design, music composition and fiction. An award-winning writer of short stories, his work has appeared in the Paris Review, Fence Magazine, Quick Fiction, New Stories from the South: The Year's Best 2010 and other publications.

    (Source: Faculty bio at Lasell College)

    Scott Rettberg - 11.04.2013 - 12:02

  4. Patrick Jagoda

    Patrick Jagoda

    Scott Rettberg - 27.04.2013 - 22:52

  5. Piksel

    "Piksel is a netwrok and an annual event for artists and developers working with free and open source software, hardware and art. Part workshop, part festival, it is organised in Bergen, Norway, and involves participants from more than a dozen countries exchanging ideas, coding, presenting art and software projects, doing workshops, performances and discussions on the aesthetics and politics of free and open source software.

    The development, and therefore use, of digital technology today is mainly controlled by multinational corporations. Despite the prospects of technology expanding the means of artistic expression, the commercial demands of the software industries severely limit them instead. Piksel is focusing on the open source movement as a strategy for regaining artistic control of the technology, but also a means to bring attention to the close connections between art, politics, technology and economy.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 20.05.2013 - 12:00

  6. Marco Donnarumma

    "New media and sonic artist, performer and teacher, Marco Donnarumma was born in Italy and is based in London. Weaving a thread around biomedia research, musical and theatrical performance, participatory practices and subversive coding, Marco looks at the collision of critical creativity with humanized technologies. His biophysical system Xth Sense won the first prize in the Margaret Guthman Musical Instrument Competition and was named the 2012 “world’s most innovative new musical instrument” by the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology, US. Recently, he curated the publication Biotechnological Performance Practice.

    Currently, Marco is a PhD student for the Embodied Audio Visual Interaction (EAVI) Research Group at Goldsmiths, University of London, supervised by Professor Atau Tanaka, and fully funded by the European Research Council (ERC)."

    (Source: Artist webpage)

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 20.05.2013 - 12:03

  7. Paolo Cirio

    Italian digital media artist. Paolo Cirio has worked in various fields: net-art, street-art, video-art, software-art and experimental fiction. He investigates perception and the creation of cultural, political and economic realities manipulated by modes of control over information's power.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 06.06.2013 - 11:47

  8. Eötvös Loránd University

    Eötvös Loránd University or ELTE, founded in 1635, is the largest university in Hungary. It is located in Budapest.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 07.06.2013 - 13:52

  9. Stelarc

    Stelarc is a performance artist who has visually probed and acoustically amplified his body. He has made three films of the inside of his body. Between 1976-1988 he completed 25 body suspension performances with hooks into the skin. He has used medical instruments, prosthetics, robotics, Virtual Reality systems, the Internet and biotechnology to explore alternate, intimate and involuntary interfaces with the body. He has performed with a THIRD HAND, a VIRTUAL ARM, a STOMACH SCULPTURE and EXOSKELETON, a 6-legged walking robot. His FRACTAL FLESH, PING BODY and PARASITE performances explored involuntary, remote and internet choreography of the body with electrical stimulation of the muscles. His PROSTHETIC HEAD is an embodied conversational agent that speaks to the person who interrogates it. He is surgically constructing an EXTRA EAR on his arm that will be internet enabled, making it a publicly accessible acoustical organ for people in other places. He is presently performing as his avatar from his SECOND LIFE site.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 13.06.2013 - 13:17

  10. Anarchy Dance Theatre

    Founded in 2010, Anarchy Dance Theater uses contemporary dance theater to express our concerns about people and life, by reproducing through movement the intricate power structures and personal relationships in today’s powerful social structures. Anarchy strives to create a dance training structure of its own, starting from awareness of the body, and reaching out to explore the relationships between time, space, objects and others, with the intention of increasing one’s own sensitivity. In addition, Anarchy also breaks free from the traditional restraints of theater, producing an entirely new performance space. With the dancers, audience, interactivity, theater and environment as its main elements, Anarchy then calls upon the choreographer’s distinct ways of handling the “relationships” between these elements, to create a dance vocabulary Anarchy calls its own, and which has as its vision the exploration of a expressionistic dance style of our times.

    (Source: Collective's webpage)

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 17.06.2013 - 14:19

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