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  1. Jody Zellen

    Jody Zellen is an artist living in Los Angeles, California. She works in many media simultaneously making photographs, installations, net art, public art, as well as artists' books that explore the subject of the urban environment. She employs media-generated representations of contemporary and historic cities as raw material for aesthetic and social investigations. Solo exhibitions include Paul Kopeikin Gallery (2007), LAXArt (2007); Pace University's Digital Gallery (2005); The Laguna Art Museum (2004-05); Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects (2002); Deep River, Los Angeles (2001).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.02.2011 - 14:06

  2. Crowds and Power

    Crowds and Power

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.02.2011 - 14:09

  3. Typing the Dancing Signifier: Jim Andrews' (Vis)Poetics

    This study focuses on the work of Jim Andrews, whose electronic poems take advantage of a variety of media, authoring programs, programming languages, and file formats to create poetic experiences worthy of study. Much can be learned about electronic textuality and poetry by following the trajectory of a poet and programmer whose fascination with language in programmable media leads him to distinctive poetic explorations and collaborations. This study offers a detailed exploration of Andrews' poetry, motivations, inspirations, and poetics, while telling a piece of the story of the rise of electronic poetry from the mid 1980s until the present. Electronic poetry can be defined as first generation electronic objects that can only be read with a computer--they cannot be printed out nor read aloud without negating that which makes them "native" to the digital environment in which they were created, exist, and are experienced in. If translated to different media, they would lose the extra-textual elements that I describe in this study as behavior.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.03.2011 - 21:58

  4. Aya Natalia Karpinska

    Aya Karpińska is an interaction designer and artist. She has been working with digital media since the late 1990s, producing a wide range of work in installation, performance and literature, as well as Web, mobile and game design. Aya is particularly interested in how reading, writing and listening are transformed by technology. Aya has Masters degrees in Interactive Telecommunications (New York University) and Literary Arts Brown University); as well as a black belt in aikido. She lives in New York and is expecting her second child.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.03.2011 - 00:27

  5. The Readers Project

    Programmatic or computational art is often, although not necessarily, related to art in other media: visual, performative, conceptual, and so on. The art systems of The Readers Project relate to writing and to reading, to our encounters with literary language. This project is an essay in language-driven digital art, in writing digital media. The Readers Project visualizes reading, although it does not do this in the sense of miming conventional human reading. Rather, the project explores and visualizes existing and alternative vectors of reading, vectors that are motivated by the properties and methods of language and language art.

    Scott Rettberg - 06.03.2011 - 11:04

  6. E-literature

    E-literature

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.03.2011 - 08:48

  7. On Lionel Kearns

    A binary meditation on the work of a pioneering Canadian poet contemplating digital poetics from the early sixties to the present. All texts are from the work of Lionel Kearns except where noted.

    (Source: Author's abstract at Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1)

    Scott Rettberg - 07.03.2011 - 23:07

  8. Jeremy Douglass

    Jeremy Douglass

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 08.03.2011 - 14:52

  9. my Molly (departed)

    my Molly (departed), formerly titled Twittering, is a textual instrument designed as a performance application. The pieces remixes text, image, audio, and video triggered through keyboard interaction. The work has been performed at the OpenPort Performance Festival (Chicago), ePoetry 2007 (Paris), The Codework Workshop (West Virginia University), The Electronic Literature in Europe Conference (Bergen Norway), and the Interrupt Festival (Brown University).

    The piece coexists with a novel (Free Dogma Press) that was written simultaneous to the development of this work. Where the novel plays on aspects of time, and draws from sources such as Joyce, Strindberg, Beckett, Dante, among others; the hypermedia textual instrument combines these in a more immediate, collapsed manner.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 09.03.2011 - 14:52

  10. ...Reusement

    ...Reusement

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.03.2011 - 09:57

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