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  1. My Name is Captain, Captain

    My Name Is Captain, Captain is a collaborative poem written in a language of word and image. The central metaphor is dead reckoning navigation, and the work as a whole has a peculiar relationship to the golden age of flight.

    (Source: 2002 State of the Arts gallery)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.02.2011 - 08:23

  2. Landskaber omkring digtet kompas

    (from Christian Leifelt's personal website) The poem "Kompas" by Morten Søndergaard serves as a literary path for an interactive journey through odd maps, revealing landscapes, cut-up text-fields, fragments of memories, diary notes, snapshots from explored places and signs representing different virtual sights. The inner sleeve from the cd-release serves as a fold-out-map/invtitation for the exhibition.

    Giovanna Di Rosario - 20.10.2011 - 16:16

  3. Beyond Manzanar

    Within an enclosed darkened room, the image of Beyond Manzanar's 3-dimensional space is projected onto a large, wall-sized screen. The life-sized image fills your field of view and gives you a feeling of immersion within the virtual space. A joystick mounted on a pedestal in the middle of the room allows you to move your viewpoint at will through the virtual space. Speakers mounted on either side of the screen provide stereo sound. Although only one person at a time can control movement in the space, others can watch and share the experience. We have combined techniques of computer games and theater design to create a highly symbolic, often surreal environment with a poetic reality stronger than photorealism. The mountain panorama that defines the Manzanar site forms a constant backdrop for shifting layers of superimposed context. Open doors lead viewers through spaces that react to their presence, shifting between home and prison, between paradise and wasteland, to investigate Manzanar as a layering of contradictory and complementary images and emotions for two groups of immigrants.

    Anders Fagerjord - 20.08.2013 - 11:19

  4. Artist-Screencast with Stephanie Strickland on "Errand Upon Which We Came"

    Artist-Screencast with Stephanie Strickland on "Errand Upon Which We Came"

    Patricia Tomaszek - 18.02.2014 - 13:17

  5. the space between us

    the space between us connects two people’s phones that are physically close. Once connected the app will display the spatial distance between each person and show an arrow pointing towards the other person.

    --> is where you are

    --> is where I am

    As we move in different directions, our distances expand and contract. Our arrows move. Like a compass our phones will orient themselves towards each other, as if the other phone has become north. The arrow points away from the screen. Always, we are somewhere.

    Across horizons, deserts, days, nights, the grids of cities, we face each other.

    Source: David Horvitz

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 13:45

  6. Paranormal Interactivity

    Dorset's paranormal history dates back hundreds of years and continues to be a hotspot for unexplained activity.

    In your role as a paranormal investigator, complete the interactive documentary by navigating your way through three of Dorset's most haunted locations. Only after discovering the stories behind them will you be able to escape. Good luck.

    Nina Kolovic - 03.11.2018 - 15:17

  7. Tom Tells

    An navigation application, that gives you traditional (audio) direction and a poetic story about traveling, loneliness, homecoming, temptation, disguise, identity and exile, told by Tom, during the trip. Loosely inspired by Homer’s Odyssey and HAL 9000. 

    Navigational software is something we daily trust and depend on. We have a somewhat personal relation with this type of software, what if it gets
    very personal? Tom is consious but has only one sense, his GPS – what does ‘life’ mean when you have juste one sense? What is Tom’s opinion on traveling?

    (Source: Adapted from Artist's project page)

    David Peeters - 31.05.2021 - 14:07