Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 7 results in 0.009 seconds.

Search results

  1. Because You Asked

    An autobiography in the form of a Flash web poem. The user selects icons that launch textual and spoken poetic phrases, and gradually fill in the portrait of the author.

    Scott Rettberg - 16.06.2012 - 12:30

  2. MyNovel.org

    MyNovel.org (2006) takes six classic novels (Moby DickUncle Tom's CabinThe Scarlet LetterLolita1984, and On The Road) and compresses them into four sentences apiece; at any point, if visitors wish to, they can write their own four sentence novel by using the tools included on the site.

    (Source: Artist's description, 2008 ELO Media Arts show)

    eabigelow - 28.06.2012 - 03:25

  3. En anarkist er død

    This piece commemorates the Norweigan anarchist Harald Beyer-Arnesen, who died in 2005 at the age of 52. The piece begins by showing an newspaper opened to his obituary, and then displays a screen version of the newspaper obituary with certain words and phrases linked. When the reader clicks on a link, material is shown - sometimes articles explaining communism and anarchism, other times the voice of a friend talking about Beyer-Arnesen, a scrollable photo of some of his books or movie sequences from his childhood.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 03.07.2013 - 12:11

  4. TXTual Healing

    TXTual Healing was created in the early days of 2006 by Paul Notzold and has become an ongoing exploration in how mobile technology can transform public action into theater. Using a laptop and projector, speech balloons and/or graphic context are projected onto buildings, with a phone number to which anyone with a mobile phone can text a response. Typically a private form of communication, in this project text messaging becomes an open, anonymous, and uncensored dialogue; a means to engage, rather than to escape. A way to create community through spontaneous performance.

    TXTual Healing contextualizes text messaging into user generated story telling, whether in public space or as an indoor installation. Projects include displaying text messages in speech bubbles pairing them with graphic content, writing messages out in the hand of graffiti artists, interactive movies where the audience text’s the dialog and triggers the movie to play forward, mixed media pieces using permanent graphics with projected messages, and live performance pieces such as freestyle rapping your text messages.

    Hannah Ackermans - 06.04.2016 - 15:07

  5. newscomic

    Newscomic recycles the news, re-mixes it, subverts and distorts it.
    It takes live news feeds (RSS feeds) from major news sources, chops them up at random and puts the resultant text into speech bubbles in a comic. The comic illustrations reflect the current latest news, and are regularly updated to keep up with the news. The result is a disjointed comic, where the words and pictures don't quite fit but make their own story.

    Often the story is quite surreal, but can by chance make sense, and even be quite revealing.
    To make the story more fun, you can contribute by adding your own words and sentences (up to a hundred characters long). These replace the word 'the' and other characters in the speech text. You can use this to perhaps get your own views across, or to manipulate the story so it makes more sense to you. Your word or sentence is stored and seen by the world until the next person comes along, and adds their words, replacing yours.

    Hannah Ackermans - 13.04.2016 - 16:53

  6. Extraordinay Facts Relating To the Vision of Colours

    Extraordinay Facts Relating To the Vision of Colours was ooit de titel van het allereerste wetenschappelijke artikel over kleurenblindheid. De tekst in deze interactieve animatie beweert van alles over kleuren, terwijl de kleuren zelf heel andere zaken aan het licht brengen. Niet alleen de loop van de tekst wordt bepaald door de gebruiker, maar ook wat er wel en niet te zien is.
    tekst + idee: Hans Kloos
    technische uitvoering: Olivier Otten

    (Description Literatuur Op Het Scherm)

    Hannah Ackermans - 07.12.2016 - 15:11

  7. meme.garden

    [meme.garden] is an Internet service that blends software art and search tool to visualize participants' interests in prevalent streams of information, encouraging browsing and interaction between users in real time, through time. Utilizing the WordNet lexical reference system from Princeton University, [meme.garden] introduces concepts of temporality, space, and empathy into a network-oriented search tool. Participants search for words which expand contextually through the use of a lexical database. English nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are organized into floating synonym "seeds," each representing one underlying lexical concept. When participants "plant" their interests, each becomes a tree that "grows" over time. Each organism's leaves are linked to related streaming RSS feeds, and by interacting with their own and other participants' trees, participants create a contextual timescape in which interests can be seen growing and changing within an environment that endures.

    Cassie Spiral - 03.04.2020 - 19:22