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15 February 2009 by nathaniel

Wikipedia Art: RETALIATION

Wikipedians are not only critical of Wikipedia Art (which has already been marked for deletion, within an hour of launch), but the powers that be are RETALIATING. Make sure Wikipedia Art, and its collaborators, are not punished for their work!

*

The page on me (Nathaniel Stern) as an artist has been up on Wikipedia since October 2007. Given my international shows and press, it has NEVER been marked with any trouble, and it suddenly has “material not appropriate for an encyclopedia” – material that has been there since day one.

Scott Kildall’s Wikipedia article was similarly never problematic; it has been online since April 2008. Now his citations supposedly have a “conflict of interest,” his work doesn’t meet the “notability guideline for biographies,” and might be “merged or deleted.”

Brian Sherwin is the critic / editor for MyArtSpace.com. For two years he has been covering some of the most established and relevant emerging artists worldwide. The Wikipedia entry on him and his work had been accepted by its community until today, when he published an article on Wikipedia Art, which was referenced on the Wikipedia Art page. Now, Sherwin’s page suddenly doesn’t meet the “notability guideline for biographies,” “needs additional citations for verification,” and might be “merged or deleted.”

Don’t let it happen. Collaborate with us. Write, write, write. Make Wikipedia Art.

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, milwaukee art, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, theory ·

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14 February 2009 by nathaniel

Wikipedia Art

Wikipedia Art logoWikipedia Art launch – TODAY! SEE THE INTERVIEW

A collaborative project initiated by Nathaniel Stern and Scott Kildall, Wikipedia Art is art composed on Wikipedia, and thus art that anyone can edit. Since the work itself manifests as a conventional Wikipedia page, would-be art editors are required to follow Wikipedia’s enforced standards of quality and verifiability; any changes to the art must be published on, and cited from, ‘credible’ external sources: interviews, blogs, or articles in ‘trustworthy’ media institutions, which birth and then slowly transform what the work is and does and means simply through their writing and talking about it. Wikipedia Art may start as an intervention, turn into an object, die and be resurrected, etc, through a creative pattern / feedback loop of publish-cite-transform that we call “performative citations.” Wikipedia Art MUST BE written about extensively both on- and off-line. This serves the dual purpose of verifying the work – which is considered controversial by those in the Wikipedia community, and occasionally removed from the site – as well as transforming it over time. WE INVITE YOU TO DO SO!

WikipediaArt.org
the Wikipedia Art page on Wikipedia
the MyArtSpace Blog interview that birthed Wikipedia Art

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, Links, me, milwaukee art, pop culture, research, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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28 January 2009 by nathaniel

Swamp Eyes: Group Contemporary Print Show in New York

Four More Trees by Nathaniel Stern

Four More Trees by Nathaniel Stern

performative digital scan turned into an
aquatint etching, engraving and drypoint, 2006
polyptych of four
top images each: 59 x 49.3 cm
bottom image: 73.8 x 49.3 cm
edition 5

Several of the hand-made prints, which were produced as details and iterations from my performative digital image series “Compressionism,” will be exhibited as part of a group show at David Krut Projects in Chelsea, New York from 7 February to 16 March. Here is more on the series and these particular works, and info on the exhibition follows. Please make it if you can. I’ll unfortunately only be there in spirit!

Swamp Eyes
7 February – 16 March 2009
Opening: Thursday, 7 February at 6pm

A curated exhibition of works on paper that contemplate the external, natural world from a set of aesthetic dimensions.  Bringing nature and culture into alliance, these works explore the natural and cultural with wit and sensitive observation. From the raised surface of the etched line to thoughtful use of colour, the works are emphatically physical and intricate.

“The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the Eyes of others only a Green thing that stands in the way. Some see Nature all ridicule and deformity, and by these I shall not regulate my proportions; and some scarce see Nature at all. But to the Eyes of the Man of Imagination, Nature is Imagination itself.” William Blake

South African and International artists exhibiting:

Ryan Arenson, Willem Boshoff, Wim Botha, Gail Behrmann, Willie Cole (US), Claire Gavronsky, William Kentridge, Alice Maher (UK), Suzanne McClelland (US), Colin Richards, Michelle Segre (US), Rose Shakinovsky, Sean Slemon, Kiki Smith (US), Nathaniel Stern, Sandile Zulu.

David Krut Projects
526 West 26th Street, #816,
New York, NY 10001
http://www.davidkrut.com

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, me, sean slemon, south african art, stimulus ·

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19 January 2009 by nathaniel

UW-Milwaukee Grad Student feature: Brandon Bauer

This is the first in a series of MFA student features from the graduate program I work in at Peck School of the Arts,  the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. These will be cross-posted on the MyArtSpace.com blog.

Creative Commons License
UW-Milwaukee Grad Student features are licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License

Brandon Bauer is a multi-disciplinary artist living and working in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His work explores how the strategy of collage creates or obscures meaning. Brandon’s art has been exhibited in the Aces(s) electronic media festival in Pau, France, The European Media Arts Festival in Osnabruck, Germany, and at Project 101 in Paris among several other national and international venues. His work has been produced in DVD editions, used as illustration for various editorial publications and books, and has been published in poster editions. Brandon has recently completed his MA at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and is currently pursuing his MFA with a focus on intermedia. Brandon is an adjunct Time Based Media faculty member at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design.

Talk about your current practice. What do you make and why is that important to you?

In many ways I consider myself a collage artist, although I have an expanded definition of what collage is or can be. The products of the mediated world are my material starting point. It has only been in the last few years that I have fully embraced the concept of collage as my medium, and recognized the need for me to confront mediated images directly. I became aware in the last few years that I had always been responding to mediated forms in my work, and with that recognition, I found that I needed to work with these forms in a direct way. My recent exhibition Words Are Not Enough at the Inova/Arts Center Gallery in Milwaukee was a critical examination of the products of the media sphere as well as different ways in which to work with them, analyze them, break them down, recombine them, unform them, and manipulate them. The exhibition was an investigation of ideology and the construction of discourse in the media as well as a critique of these operations.

Images and details from the Words Are Not Enough exhibition, Inova/Arts Center Gallery at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Fall 2008

What got you to this point? What were you doing or making before, and how did that lead you to this kind of production?

I realized I had always been responding to the media in one way or another, and collage has been a constant component in my work, so in the last few years I decided to really concentrate on these forms, strategies, and methods. I think I first realized I was responding directly to media and mediated images in the 1990’s when the images surfaced of the emaciated prisoners in the camps during the war in the Balkans. After seeing those images I began working on a series that came to be called Hungry Ghosts; the series encompassed paintings, drawings, and mixed media works that all depicted tall, withered, cadaverous figures. The collage element came into the works as newspaper pages and headlines buried in the paint so that they could only be seen or revealed by looking closely at the work.

I Bury the Dead in My Belly, from the series Hungry Ghosts, mixed media on wood, 60 x 40.5 inches, 2001

The biggest change in my work came as a result of 9/11 and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Those events really made me reassess the role of art and the need to find a more responsive critical practice. Working on an oil painting for a month in the seclusion of the studio was not going to allow me the kind of direct critical response that I felt was necessary in face of the rush to war that occurred. It was actually quite an empowering moment to be an artist, I wasn’t the only one to feel that way, and that is what made it so empowering- there was an amazing surge of artistic activity as artists all over the world attempted to put their talents in the service of a critical response to the rush to war by the Bush administration. I was very fortunate to co-edit a book called Peace Signs: The Anti-War Movement Illustrated, that chronicled the worldwide graphic response to the march to war by the United States. The Spanish language version of the book won the Ciutat prize for design in Barcelona for the year 2003. This was the first time that this massive surge of creativity was mounted to try to stop a war before it had even started. Most anti-war art historically has been made during ongoing conflicts, or when specific atrocities came to light, or in the case of graphic works like Goya’s Disasters of War, or Otto Dix’s Der Krieg, made years after the fact. Anyway, it was during this time that I tried to find a more responsive critical practice, and looked for different ways of getting the work out there into the world. I did a number of flyers and stickers to be placed directly on the street, and started doing illustrations for publications like Clamor Magazine and Earth First!, as well as working with other activist based art groups like Visual Resistance and Just Seeds. All of this made me think more critically about the function of art, and eventually led me to work with media as a material in a more specifically critical way.

Peace Signs: The Anti-War Movement Illustrated cover

More Dead and Wounded Everyday sticker and placement, created to mark the 1,000 U.S. casualty in the Iraq war, 2004

Corpobot, Illustration for Clamor Magazine May/June 2004

Who inspires you – that you know personally, as well as historically or in contemporary practice?

I am constantly inspired by my friends and so many of the people around me and what they do. Colin Matthes is a good example. He is insanely productive and an immense talent; his last exhibition, War Fair: Occupation Games for Citizens and Non-Combatants, was astounding – a combination of interactive carnival games as a critique of contemporary warfare. Colin and I collaborated on an exhibition in 2007 called Over There, which brought together work we had both been producing independently as well as collaborative art we made specifically for that show. I think that collaboration opened up avenues and possibilities for both of us that we have continued to expand upon in our own ways. I love collaborative projects in general; that kind of work always motivates me and inspires me.

Brandon Bauer and Colin Matthes installing work for the Over There exhibition, Brooks Barrow Gallery, Milwaukee WI, September 2007

As for historic inspirations, I always come back to the collage and photomontage work of the Dada artists as well as the Neo-Dadaist assemblage work like Rauschenberg’s “combines” and the work of Bruce Connor. I consistently find new ways to appreciate the work from these two periods on many different levels. As for contemporary artists, I am very interested in the work of Thomas Hirschhorn, especially his public monuments, and the work of Cady Noland really intrigues me. I respond to the fearlessness of Hirschhorn’s work, and the fact that he takes the general public seriously as readers of philosophy. I love the innate democratic quality of his public art, and the fact that he is unafraid to confront theory with praxis. I am intrigued by Noland’s work with appropriated materials and her investigation of the undercurrent of violence in the American character. She is an artist whose work I want to spend more time with. My list of inspirations could really go on forever. I try to absorb everything I can, am an omnivorous reader and always hungry visually. Lately I have been reading a lot of Jacques Rancière – his analysis of montage informed a lot of the work in my last exhibition, and I have recently picked up some of his non art-related critical writing on democracy, to see where it might lead me.

Tell us about your favorite and least favorite works of art from your entire repertoire – why they deserve those titles and what you learned from them.

Least favorite… that is honestly a very difficult question for me because I get something out of everything I make, successful or not. I tend to rework things endlessly so a piece I am not happy about may get cut up and recombined into a new work, or may be worked over until it feels right. It’s like Colin said as we were collaborating on work for the Over There exhibition, and I’m paraphrasing him: “either it’s going to be great or I’m going to run it into the ground- there is no in-between”… That’s basically it, I’m either going to make it work or create an absolute disaster. Usually my unsuccessful pieces get re-purposed or reworked into new pieces. Art is a fluid process for me, and in that way there are no real failures… I almost wish I would make a spectacular disaster- it may be my greatest work!

As for my favorite, that’s hard too… I guess I would have to say I really love the work I was doing in 2006, because that work was a point in which all of my concerns started coming together. I am particularly fond of much of the collage work I did then, as well as the video work in the short/cuts series, which was a series of 30 short videos experimenting with a variety of different aspects of the video medium. There was just an openness and honesty in the work I was making then, I was trying to zero in on what motivated me to make work and why, and I think it comes across in those pieces. My current work owes a great debt to that period of focused experimentation.

Grassroots Congress, mixed media and collage on paper 4 x 6 inches, 2006

IR, mixed media and collage on paper 4 x 6 inches, 2006

And, mixed media and collage on paper 4 x 6 inches, 2006

What are you working on right now, and where do you see your work headed next?

Right now I am in the midst of the preparatory work for a rotoscope animation project, and there are a number of threads I touched on in my exhibition Words Are Not Enough that I want to continue, expand upon and develop further. I also work with a number of other people on various projects and we have some irons in the fire. I recently contributed to a portfolio project through Just Seeds about the prison industrial complex that will tour through Canada and has some other exhibition dates slated in the US. I will have a DVD released soon of video collaborations I did with the Milwaukee based experimental noise musician Peter J. Woods, and I am involved with ongoing projects for the BATHAS Internationale, which is an anonymous participatory umbrella collective project that explores how the modernist avant-garde notion of negation as revolt has been taken up by subcultures in contemporary society. I am in discussions with A. Bill Miller of Master-List 2000 about a BATHAS/Master-List 2000 net-art collaboration, but that is still in the initial stages. I will have a review of Jacques Rancière’s The Future of the Image published in the next edition of the FATE journal discussing its use in foundations level pedagogy. Beyond that my wife and I just had our first baby, so maybe I need to find an art practice that just involves me holding my little baby girl…

Posted in art, art and tech, me, milwaukee art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, research, reviews, stimulus, technology ·

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18 January 2009 by nathaniel

MyArtSpace Undergraduate scholarships

myartspace.com announced the top winners of their 2008 Undergraduate Scholarship Competition this week. The site and blog have been amazingly supportive of emerging artists with their community, interviews/blog and competitions over the last 2 years since their inception. I myself have become more and more involved with them (after an interview with Brian, I’ve begun doing a few guest blogs, which will increase in the coming months), and have started encouraging both my grads and undergrads to join, post their work, enter the competitions. Via their site, below are the top-3 winners of the recent  competition where the winning undergraduate students will split $8000 in cash scholarships. To see the 50 finalists, click HERE.

——— Via the myartspace blog ———

First Place Winner: Sara Susin (Stanford University)
Sara Susin was born in Denver, Colorado. She is currently completing her BA at Stanford University with a major in Studio Art and a minor in Creative Writing. She has been painting at the Art Students League of Denver since 1990. She has taken classes from Heather Delzell, Kevin Weckbach, Kim English, Ron Hicks, Ken Velastro and Quang Ho. In 2004, Sara won the Allied Arts Award. In 2005 she was highlighted in Southwest Art Magazine’s annual “21 under 30” feature. Sara has sold paintings to private and corporate collections including the Kaiser Permanente Corporate Collection. Sara plans to pursue a career as an oil painter. To read an interview with Sara, Click HERE.

Back to the Sun, 40″ x 48″, oil on wood. Sara Susin‘s Winning Gallery

Second Place Winner: Jessica Brown (University of Alaska)
Jessica Brown is completing her BA in Art degree at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Jessica has participate in a number of solo and group exhibits. In her own words “I believe in the off-kilter, the beauty of the asymmetrical, and the balance of opposition. I revel in the surprising, messy and often humorous nature of life. My works are inspired by the question marks surrounding cultural dualities such as mind/body, man/nature, and self/other. Whether with painting, performance, or installations my aim is to stimulate introspective dialogue in my viewer and expand their intrigue of the absurdities of life.” To Read an interview with Jessica, click HERE.

Match Book, altered book, ink and matches. Jessica Brown’s Winning Gallery

Third Place Winner: Zach Stein (University of Kentucky)
Zach Stein’s installations, monotypes, and paintings tend to be experimental in nature. This is achieved by the fact that Zach utilizes a variety of mediums in an intuitive manner– everything from hot glue to rum. He is an artist who is not afraid to test the limits of his materials. Zach is currently a student at the University of Kentucky. Zach is currently and undergraduate student in art education/studio at University of Kentucky. To read an interview with Zach, click HERE

faulter, 60×60, acrylic on plastic bags. Zach Stein’s Winning Gallery

Catherine McCormack-Skiba, the founder myartspace and CEO noted “The student body within myartspace is significant in size and importance. We devised a scholarship program for both our graduate and undergraduate students to compete for consideration and win a meaningful cash scholarship. We hope to expand this program each year.”

Catherine McCormack-Skiba went on to say, “We had entries to the scholarship program from students at over 1,200 colleges and universities. The unbridled spirit and creativity from this group is quite impressive. While the top winners receive their recognition and award money, virtually all the submissions were of top-notch quality. We applaud the young contemporary artists in school today. Their contribution to the fine art world will be felt for decades to come. We are so excited from this first scholarship program we will be launching our 2009 scholarship program later this year and hope to see more than double the participation. Myartspace remains focused on improving the lives and careers of its community members.”

About myartspace:

myartspace, the premier online venue for contemporary art, is one of the fastest growing and diverse communities on the internet. Its members include more than 50,000 artists, collectors, galleries and other art world professionals from across the globe, and it currently hosts the work of nearly 30,000 artists. Membership is free and artist can upload an unlimited amount of work including images, music and video. Myartspace is created and run by CatMacArt Corporation. www.catmacart.com.

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25 December 2008 by nathaniel

Tops of 2008: A Different Kind of Year in Review

Merry Christmakkah! Happy new year!

The turkey is defrosting (mmmm, bourbon basting), Sidonie stayed up late (for a two year old) last night eating chocolate and playing with her new doll house from her ouma (OMG I have the cutest daughter ever), and I have little bit of morning to pound out a blog on what will probably be the only full day off I take this year (OK, OK, I already spent 30 mins on my dissertation when I first woke up, but the thing has to get done, right? Wait, is blogging ‘work’?).

So for my Tops of 2008: A Different Kind of Year in Review, I’ve decided to go with four different Top 5 lists: The Top 5 people I newly met in 2008, The Top 5 people I’d like to meet because of what they did (or the work I saw from them) in 2008, The Top 5 exhibitions for me (what I found most enjoyable), and The Top 5 shows I wish I had seen, but didn’t. Hope you like it! Feel free to comment, leaving any things/people I missed but might (or should have) enjoy(ed)!

The Top 5 people I newly met in 2008

  1. Scott Kildall. A great net.artist, video artist, SL performer, and more – and becoming a great friend – check out his work if you don’t know it, and expect some collaborations from the two of us in the near future. Scott and I were introduced online through a mutual friend over a year ago, and did several shows together because of that contact, but only met in person for the first time this year.
    Scott Kildalls Uncertain Location, 2007

    Scott Kildall's 'Uncertain Location,' 2007

  2. Camille Utterback. Also an amazing (and award-winning) artist, working mostly in interactive media, Camille makes appearances in my recent writings on Rhizome and in my dissertation. She came out for the Act/React exhibition in Milwaukee, on which she has 3 works; we did dinner and grad crits, and plan to hang out again in San Fransisco before too long.
  3. Edward Winkleman (that’s his blog link, here is his gallery). I popped in to curator and gallerist Ed Winkleman’s space for a chat on my stop-over in New York when moving from Ireland/South Africa to Milwaukee for the new job. He is as professional, excitable and generous with his time, critique and advice as his blog suggests.
  4. Zach Lieberman (his site seems to currently be down, so that link googles him). Co-creator (with the also awesome Theo Watson) of openframeworks, the free, open source, multimedia art development environment, Zach is an Ars Electronica-winning artist, Eyebeam fellow and NYC-based teacher. I took an openframeworks workshop with him in London, where he “adopted” everyone there: a promise to help us with our work how- and whenever he could in the future.
  5. Jessica Meuninck-Ganger, my new printmaking collaborator who I speak of at length here. Expect much from us in 2009.

Top 5 people I’d like to meet because of what they did (or the work I saw from them) in 2008

  1. Rachel Maddow. Maddow is the only news pundit I’ve ever had a crush on. (Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert don’t count). I’ve been following her for over 3 years now – I used to listen to her show on Air America via the internet in South Africa – and she gets even cooler as she gets more famous.
  2. Brian Massumi. Yes, I’ve been going on about cultural theorist and philosopher Massumi for ages; but I still have not met him, I am more familiar with his work the more I write about it, and he does have a new essay out in this book. I still find his Parables for the Virtual dreamy.
  3. Johan Grimonprez. A brilliant video -actually, it may be film- and print artist. Grimonprez is obviously obsessed with Hitchcock and all he has done to culture and vision, and gifts it back to us in the most stunning and unusual ways. You must see his 2005, Looking for Alfred. I wish he had more of an online presence!
  4. Ai Weiwei. I saw Chinese art celebrity Ai Weiwei’s interdisciplinary art work at dokumenta 12 – and I can’t remember where else – in 2007, and have been reading up on him ever since (and so am counting him in 2008). His site does him no justice, so google him. Amazing.

    Ai Weiwei's 'Template'

    Ai Weiwei's 'Template'

  5. Shai Agassi. Have you read this guy’s ideas for the electric car? Check out this Wired Article on him and his work/mission.

The Top 5 exhibitions for me (what I found most enjoyable)

  1. Act/React at the Milwaukee Art Museum. This exhibition of full-bodied interactive art was like a welcome present – it opened just weeks after my arrival to my new home. It’s a great show – you really should go see it if you are in the Midwest before it comes down early next year. Read my review here.
  2. Juan Muñoz: A Retrospective at the Tate Modern. Granted, part of my enjoyment of this show was the company and conversation (every time I go to London, the wonderfully gregarious Michael Szpakowski takes me museum/gallery hopping), but Muñoz’s work also encompasses some of the most affective and gut-wrenching sculpture I’ve ever seen.

    Juan Muñoz, Many Times, 1999. Polyester and resin, Dimensions variable

    Juan Muñoz, Many Times, 1999. Polyester and resin, Dimensions variable

  3. Song of Solomon at the Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland. This was actually a performance-based adaptation of an 8-channel generative sound sculpture by Ralph Borland (fellow South African artist and Trinity grad student) and Julian Jonker, but I found the performance version wonderfully moving. See slightly more about the piece, and what I thought, here.
  4. When enough people start saying the same thing, Michael MacGarry at Art Extra, Johannesburg, South Africa. This show was a double wammy: it proved MacGarry’s standing as the new hot young art star in South Africa, and simultaneously solidified David Brodie’s standing as the hot new gallerist. The latter already has an ongoing and reciprocal deal with Cape Town’s Michael Stevenson Gallery. Also, the show was great. More here and here.
  5. Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia: The Moment Art Changed Forever at the Tate Modern. So it’s a historical show and the second one I’ve put from the Tate, but what a show! And Michael really is fantastic to talk to about art – it makes the whole experience much more exciting. Also, check out his beautiful vlog.

The Top 5 shows I wish I had seen, but didn’t

  1. (REPEAT) from the beginning, William Kentridge’s new solo at the Cape Goodman in Cape Town, South Africa (and elsewhere). Need I say more? This is on now.

    Construction for 'Return' (Conductor), 2008, Steel, black paint, Two identical figures, each c. 61 x 61 x 33cm

    Construction for 'Return' (Conductor), 2008, Steel, black paint, Two identical figures, each c. 61 x 61 x 33cm

  2. The Art of Participation, 1950 to Now at SF MOMA. This show makes both implicit and explicit connections between relational aesthetics and interactive / net.art, through historical and contemporary work. And several of my friends are on it!
  3. Take Your Time, Olafur Eliasson at MoMA and P.S.1. Eliasson has gotten to the point where he is big enough that it is trendy to hate him – and yeh, as Paddy Johnson asserts, his waterfall in NYC sucks. But from what I have seen of his work, I am sure this retrospective was stunning.
  4. .ZA Young Art From South Africa at Palazzo delle Papesse, Sienna. Many of the new, young contemporary art stars from South Africa are on this exhibition. They all deserve props, and I wish I could have been there to give ’em some. Here’s a review by Rat Western.
  5. Jozi and the (M)other City at Michaelis Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa. A group show of commissioned works by South African artists on their relationships to the cities of Johannesburg and Cape Town, and also the commissioner/premier  for my Doin’ my part to lighten the load. Some of the work looks awesome, so I was really sad to miss it. Sigh. I miss you, South Africa (especially from under all this snow in Milwaukee!).

Dude, I forgot how long proper blogging takes. That’s all I got. Happy Holidays!!!!

Posted in art, art and tech, Ireland Art, me, milwaukee art, news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, research, reviews, south african art, stimulus ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

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