The Games Art networking event will bring together artists, gamers, hackers, theorists, curators, activists, thinkers and doers all of kind. People who work and play with games, video games and playful...
Radical Software is an exhibition including some recent examples of radical software. The name pays homage to the magazine that had the merit to combine, political considerations and use of the media
FutureEverything 2011 brings the future into the present through music, art and ideas. Arriving in Manchester in May for its sixteenth year, FutureEverything is the essential place to find out what's on...
The Master of Fine Arts in Creative Media (MFACM) emphasizes the integration of art, culture and technology. As an internationally recognized terminal degree in the creative arts, the MFACM provides intensive...
The Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA), Ted Decker, and Modified Arts collaborate on phICA’s inaugural exhibition to present Source Code, an exhibition reintroducing Jon Haddock’s Isometric...
Janez Janša, Janez Janša and Janez Janša tackle collectively the issue of the politics of painting for the first time. The project Signature consists of twenty-seven paintings, which were commissioned...
An exhibition about computer code, contemporary narratives, digital art, minimalism and conceptual art. It is exploring the different discourses in the social science (politics, programming or music) to...
The Smithsonian American Art Museum has dedicated a permanent-collection gallery to time-based art, an important new aspect of the media arts initiative at the museum that includes acquisitions, exhibitions,...
The [DAM]Berlin gallery will for the first time in Europe exhibit new software works by Mark Napier in the form of objects, life-size and smaller prints and a projection.
”Buscando Al Sr. Goodbar” is a journey through Murcia, Spain that involves a search for the locations and authors of various YouTube videos produced in the city.
If the longitude and latitude coordinates are included with a video when publishing it on YouTube, then this video automatically appears on a GoogleEarth map and connects it to a physical location. A link is therefore made between the YouTube video and where it was produced in the city.
A bus tour was organized by Michelle Teran, who visited Murcia repeatedly via GoogleEarth and started to get to know intimately some of the people living there through the YouTube videos they produced. As the bus moved through the city, its movements along the streets were mirrored on a GoogleEarth map. YouTube videos were played corresponding to where they appeared on the map and could be viewed on a large flat screen.