Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 56 results in 0.01 seconds.

Search results

  1. 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

  2. A Trace

    Explained very simply, this piece is a story about a man being presented with a mysterious object that is either:

    1. Directions upon which he must act or
    2. Documentation of his own origins

    If they are the former, then the events that are listed are the events that proceed. If they are the latter, the events that proceed are his re-encounter with how he came into being not as an organism, necessarily, but as a someone who believes in space, physicality, reason, etc.

    The piece alternates between two locations: "in here", which is where the narrator builds a space in order to orient himself in relation to the question the mysterious object presents, and "that sort of place", which is where the narrator is presented with new information that both helps and antagonizes him. The juxtaposition of the closed, structured space of "that sort of place" with the open sprawl of "in here" invokes the question that the narrator circles around - whether he can recreate or reconstruct his own beginnings or origins to the point of creating the closed, structured space in which he exists now.

    Cassie Spiral - 03.04.2020 - 19:40

  3. Voidopolis

    Voidopolis is a digital performance about loss and memory that is currently unfolding over 40-ish posts on my Instagram feed (@kmustatea). It is a loose retelling of Dante’s Inferno, informed by the grim experience of wandering through NYC during a pandemic. Instead of the poet Virgil, my guide is a caustic hobo named Nikita. Voidopolis makes use of synthetic language, generated in this instance without the letter ‘e’ and the images are created by “wiping” humans from stock photography. The piece is meant to culminate in loss, so will eventually be deleted from my feed once the narrative is completed. By ultimately disappearing, this work makes a case for a collective amnesia that follows cataclysm.

    (Source: Author's Statement)

    Cecilie Klingenberg - 27.02.2021 - 16:02

  4. Sentenced to Covid: Voices of the Pandemic

    Sentenced to Covid: Voices of the Pandemic displays our single-sentence responses to the pandemic. You can read the responses in either manual or auto mode (the latter which provides an endless looping display of the responses). If you want, you can write your own response for others to see.

    (Source: Exhibition Documentation)

    Lene Tøftestuen - 06.05.2021 - 14:45

  5. De Poetry Compressor

    Ted van Lieshout developed the "Poetry Compressor," which is an app that analyses text and systematically rearranges letters and text structures. It was their answer to the question whether the internet can contribute to pen, paper, and word processors.

    David Peeters - 17.05.2021 - 16:15

  6. Generationenprojekt

    The GenerationenProject is a history written from below. Here memories, diary entries and literary texts are published that revolve around historical events that have affected us all. For in the middle of the great story that we read about in the history books, we are also given the history of the people who experienced both painful and beautiful moments.

    (Source: Project Description, translated by Kine-Lise M. Skjeldal)

    Kine-Lise Madsen Skjeldal - 02.10.2021 - 00:37

Pages