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  1. Phares gamma

    The text functions as a sampling of an imaginary database of our time becoming , treated from a program, infinite, labyrinthine text, like a neuronal network, a clone infinitely recycled never stopping, like encephalogram, like life, except biological or mechanical accident, what autorizes the computer, coding indefinitely texts, sounds, motionless or animated images, in constant change or Cyber Flesh. [Source: http://www.agencetopo.qc.ca/vitrine_blog/cd_phares/cd_phares_en.html ]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 08.04.2013 - 13:57

  2. Histoire de la Femme aux Grosses Mains

    Une femme se réveille un matin avec une anomalie biologique : elle interprète le monde environnant au travers des sillons de ses doigts dès qu’elle touche un objet. La science et la médecine l’aident à s’adapter à cette nouvelle captation du monde, qu’elle vit comme une hypersensibilité continue. Ses mains grossissent : c’est la Femme Aux Grosses Mains, la FAGM. Le cédérom est accompagné d’un livre illustré, dont il constitue le dernier chapitre. [Source: http://www.agencetopo.qc.ca/blog/2002/11/12/histoire-de-la-femme-aux-gro... ]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 08.04.2013 - 14:07

  3. the WORD project

    This collection of short animated concrete poems— or “word art” as Christopher prefers to call it— is reminiscent of Ana María Uribe’s Anipoemas and Neil Hennessy’s “Paddle” and “Puddle” poems because they are minimalist explorations of words and their components. The wit and inventiveness exhibited by these poems allow for moments of insight and reflection on the ideas presented. For example, the simplest of kinetic operations create a powerful comment on the supposed binary opposition between the words in “east & west” and “poles apart.” The trio of poems on bipolar disorder uses visual transformations of words to critique popular misconceptions, the use of medication to treat it, and praise The Icarus Project.

    (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 28.04.2013 - 16:28

  4. I Cried Of Course

    This multimedia version of William Minor’s poem takes the musical version and adds a layer of photographic documentation that brings out the personal and particular in the poem. The sad tone of the poem’s text is underscored by the piano and vocal performances, and the images help us visualize the details of what is behind this emotional energy. Here we see a man and a woman in black and white photographs, young, together, and happy to be there. Other images of the woman alone gazing out of the photograph’s frame, in one case wearing a wedding dress, suggest that the memory of the deceased young man is still alive within her. Images of manuscript versions of the poem, including drafts and handwritten musical scores show the work in progress, evolving from one version to the next. All of these objects— manuscripts, scores, photographs, audio recordings, and e-poem— seek to capture that which can only be experienced or imagined.

    (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 28.04.2013 - 17:08

  5. Lux: Bronzino 1540

    A hypermedia work, or ficto-critcal art history, LUX deconstructs, contextualizes and manipulates the Bronzino painting, "The Exposure of Luxury".

     

    Source: trAce archive

    Patricia Tomaszek - 02.07.2013 - 18:13

  6. 2002: A Palindrome Story in 2002 Words

    2002 is a collaboratively-authored narrative palindrome, exactly 2002 words in length. 2002 was first published in a limited edition of 202 inscribed copies on New Years Day, 2002. On February 20th, 2002 (20-02-2002) 2002 was published on the Web. On November 11, 2002 (11-11-2002) 2002 was published as an illustrated book.

    A palindrome is a text in which the sequence of letters and numbers is the same forwards and backwards. Spaces, punctuation, and line breaks are used freely. In 2002, the authors took the liberty of assuming an accented e (é) is the same letter as e, and that an i with an umlaut (ï) is the same as an i. Other than that it is perfect.

    The palindrome was written by Nick Montfort and William Gillespie with the assistance of an Eraware computer program named Deep Speed. Design of the HTML version and the book were done by Ingrid Ankerson. Illustrations were provided by Shelley Jackson. The creators of the book have had the historically rare privilege of experiencing two palindromic years: 1991 and 2002. No generation of people has lived through two palindromic years since 1001, and none will again until 2112.

    Scott Rettberg - 08.07.2013 - 16:23

  7. Leste o Leste? (Did You Read the East?)

    An urban intervention project involving electronic billboards and user-selected graffiti.

    "Conceived in the context of a broad urban intervention, Did You Read the East? dialogued with the guerilla teactics of graffiti. Participants were invited to choose e-graffiti that I had created--a series of six video-poems, composed in stylized fonts--and "invade" the programming of the electronic pantel. The graffiti appeared among advertising, mixing and remixing themes that included violence, social hypocrisy, love, and lyricism." 

    Scott Rettberg - 09.07.2013 - 15:16

  8. Poetry Machine (version 1.0)

    The visitor enters a dimly lit room. On a projection screen runs the text that is written by nobody. The keys of the keyboard move as if by a ghost's hand. A monotone, mechanical voice reads out the generated text, sentence by sentence.

    Without the public nearby, the system writes quickly and fluently. Thunderstorm of letters. Incessantly, one word follows the other. When visitors approach, the text generator staggers, hesitates, at times grows completely silent. The system leaves the scene to the observer and invites him to strike the keys himself. If he enters text, it appears on the screen like the machine's. Poetry Machine takes up his text and associates starting with his words. The flow of texts in the interplay between the human and the machine doesn't cease.

    If the user's input contains words that are still unknown to Poetry Machine, the program sends autonomous „bots" into the internet to get appropriate informations. They evaluate the material found and feed the resulting data back into the system. The search process of the „bots" can be followed on a second screen. Visited sites, their valuation and the documents found are shown.

    Scott Rettberg - 10.07.2013 - 13:46

  9. Les dormeurs - The Sleepers

    Les dormeurs est une oeuvre qui a pour point de départ le poème « Le Dormeur » de Rimbaud. Une série de photographies et d'images sont présentées et l'internaute doit cliquer sur l'écran pour faire apparaître la prochaine image. Les images constituent des fragments de la vie d'un soldat.

    (Source: NT2 / Marianne Cloutier)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 26.08.2013 - 10:12

  10. The Dancing Rhinoceri of Bangladesh

    The Dancing Rhinoceri of Bangladesh is described as "an interactive poem with a strong message" and "a surrealist poem." Niss states that her goal was "to make a textually-based work that uses techniques other than ordinary hypertext. So instead of clicking to get to a new part of the poem, all the text is presented on the screen at once. The content is revealed by mousing over a word which highlights words scattered across the field which combine to form a sentence."

    (Source: Blog post by Yen Ooi, on Furtherfield's Website)

    Lene Tøftestuen - 05.06.2021 - 13:36

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