This long-awaited visual survey of art and the Internet over the last two and a half decades explores the legacy of the Internet on art and reveals how artists and institutions are using it and why. Original, 3,000 first printing.
An introduction to the art of the Internet examines key works, events, and technological developments that show how artists have employed online technologies to engage with the traditions of art history, focusing on the themes of ...
These new volumes will build on this historic partnership and reinvigorate the conversation around contemporary culture once again.
The curatorial scenario Paul explores is more acutely described by the artist Olia Lialina. A key figure of the 1990s net.art scene, Lialina is the creator of My Boyfriend Came Back From the War (1996) [pp. 216–17], an iconic work from ...
In addition to a post-internet and post-digital state of mind, there is another global shift: Covid-19. During this global pandemic, that started in early 2020, followed by national lockdowns in most countries in the global north, ...
"You Are Here is the best anything I've read in ages ... and I'm jealous I'm not a contributor. I really loved it. It's a joy to see new green shoots of cultural tendencies emerging from barren soil." - Douglas Coupland
From Scala, the world's leading digital repository of fine art, comes an authoritative guide to art on the Internet for art lovers, students, researchers and professionals... "The Scalavision Guide To...
The development of Internet art has been short and rapid and dates from the introduction of web browsers in the mid-1990s. Artists realized the potential of a medium and system...
... 212 Wiesel, Elie, 73 wifi, 82 Wii games, 5,87 Wikipedia, 12,48, 93,240 Persian language, 14 Wilczek, Frank, 239–41 Winfrey, Oprah, 89,92 Wintour, Anna, 128 Wire, The, 107 wireframing system, 154 Wiseman, Frederick, 160 Wittgenstein, ...
By providing a context for this work--showing that it was shaped by varying mixes of social relations, cultural strategies, and political and aesthetic concerns-- At a Distance effectively refutes the widely accepted idea that networked art ...
Today almost everybody has some kind of connection to the internet. No Internet, No Art explores what this situation entails with respect to one cultural field in particular: art.