> Just wanted to comment on kill the messenger. I really like the new and innovative approach to narrative. The combination of sight and sound make for a more wholistic experience and allow the observer to fully become one wtih the art work. The readeer becomes a part of the ...
> a disturbing, James Bondesque experience is evoked by clicking on the "spotlight" cursor. the marginalization of these figures, contoured and blocked out into flat areas, is emphasized by the fact that no faces or details about these women are seen, but that they remain only objects. It is reminiscent ...
> "children's game" includes clever tactics of motion and interaction between media and the viewer. however, the pace seems slow, and I'd like to see the figures crossing planes for greater levels of interplay between elements.
At 14:23 -0500 11/21/02, Carol Stakenas wrote: […]Pixel Press sent [this] link to a project they are hosting on their site, inviting submissions. Check it out and send it along to anyone whom you think might be interested.
On Tuesday, November 19, 2002, at 07:51 PM, Curt Cloninger wrote:
> Actually, I'm not sure if art and philosopy are that akin. So for t. > to say, "why can't art be boring and tough to crack? philosopy is > boring and tough to crack, yet people wade ...
The Experience Economy is a new stage of economic offering. The agriculture based economy dealt mostly in raw materials: wheat to bake ones own bread, wool to knit the family garments ...
> "The medium is no longer the message, the tool has become the message."
Aie. The monkey who never understood 'the message' is now correcting it. The tool is the message, said the ape waving the first bronze spear around. 'This here ...