VIDEOTAGE NEWS August 2002 Videotage News Contents 1. Experimental Intermedia continues through November 2002 2. Microwave International Media Art Festival open call for entries 3. Telepidemic: Videoart Exhibition, Kobe, Japan, 24-28 July 2002 4. 02 HK Sound + Vision Festival 5. Looking for Mies: a multi-media architectural music performance by Zuni ...
two new objects have been added to the cyber-kitchen today: 'bin' - by neil jenkins 'light-switch' by Kate Armstrong http://www.the-cyber-kitchen.com – o [ ][ II ][ II ]___ _ /^\_ /88|______|__ |_____ ][ |XX| o|o | @ | the cyber-kitchen
Event related to the "Danube Exodus: The Rippling Currents of the River" exhibition.
Discussion Panel: "Biography on Film" Panel discussion with Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Mark Jonathan Harris and artist Peter Forgacs on their approach to biography in the highly charged context of the Holocaust. Special guests include Michael Roth ...
"The Danube Exodus: The Rippling Currents of the River", on view August 17 through September 29, 2002, at the Getty Research Institute, presents visitors with a unique interactive media experience that immerses them in the sights and sounds of Jewish and German refugees fleeing in opposite directions along the same ...
Event related to the "Danube Exodus: The Rippling Currents of the River" exhibition.
Performance: "Free Fall Oratorio" This multimedia project, based on the award-winning video "Free Fall" (1996-97) by artist Peter Forgacs and composer Tibor Szemzo, presents a moving and intimate picture of the Hungarian Holocaust. Performing live against a ...
Event related to the "Danube Exodus: The Rippling Currents of the River" exhibition.
U.S. Premiere Screening: "A Bibo Reader" The Getty screens Peter Forgacs' latest film, "A Bibo Reader", in which the artist uses found footage and original music by Tibor Szemzo to pay homage to the great Hungarian ...
November 2001 GLIMPSES was proposed to various artists, basically from around Europe, as a web project, in which they could comment on the event of 11th September 2001 and the consequences that followed up.
Digital technology is so ephemeral that an artwork created using a G4 Mac, Flash 4.0 software and C++ coding today may no longer be viewable 10, 20 or even 200 years from now ...