reality has several levels. no matter when/where/who you are you'll have just the slightest hint of what really goes on. who cares about who the goodboys and badboys are? no revolution is possible, anyway. why bother understanding where the "good" is?
My name is Monika Pilchak and I writing to you on behalf of Prof. Louis Kaplan, who is the Chair for two searches we are currently conducting in the Centre for Visual and Media Culture at the University of ...
"…The practices of NMA represent an emancipatory movement: artists refused to accept the traditional assignments and definitions of roles as well as the value-system of 'classic'art criticism and theory. The factors that constitute the system of meaning of art, and its institutions, were rendered problematic. Craftsmanship and subjective expression were ...
We recently finished a short video describing a project we started last summer (2K5), and that was completed early this summer. Just recently I posted it to youtube. It is somewhere at the intersection of database, painting, diy gis, walking work and locative media. Does painting put the taint on ...
A net artwork merging meteorological science, and digital artwork. Vholoce*: Weather Visualiser uses real-time weather data to create a series of visualizations intended to both artistically interpret weather conditions ...
Hello. Because I know that these things tend to revolve around school schedules, I've extended the deadline for this by one week, to Wednesday, 9/20. Please forward to students, colleagues, etc…
At 3:09 AM +0000 9/11/06, Alexis Turner wrote: >Soooo…in other words, art is an SUV? > >In that case, Charlie probably had it right on the mark when he said it was >useless. After all, what is the point of money and status (as illustrated in >Rob's ...
not being american, i take special care in saying one thing on this subject
and also because i was thinking that it could easily be that some of you, maybe the ones posting over here from new york, might have lost someone on 9/11.
WHEN: September 26, 7:00-9:00 p.m. WHERE: Art Interactive, 130 Bishop Allen Drive, at the corner of Prospect Street, Cambridge. Free parking in the lot on the corner or take the T to Central Square and walk ...
INSTRUCTIONS: 1) Get up off of the couch. 2) (but bring the remote with you) 3) Go to the south west corner of 3rd and Arch Streets 4) Use your remote to activate the park.