Monitor-Based Web Sites

  1. Web Site
    Image of the earth courtesy of the Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, NASA, Johnson Space Center
    Alejandro Perez-Avila-Perez
    University of Arizona
    Tucson, Arizona, USA
    Email: aperezav [AT] email.arizona.edu
    Collaborator: Lucy Petrovich, University of Arizona
    Global Eyes Web Site (http://www.globaleye.org.uk/)
    The Global Eye website is the Gold Award winning educational resource for schools to raise awareness of current global development issues. The website includes the Latest Global Eye, Teachers’ Notes, Back Issues, and an Index invaluable to teaching at the Primary and Secondary levels. The web site highlights alternative networkds that connect creative people around the world, including native and indigenous communities that use digital media to bring their voices, memories, and cultures to each other and a wider public, transcending political boundaries.
  2. Online Interactive Website
    Copper Frances Giloth, Invited Artist
    University of Massachusetts
    Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
    Email: giloth [AT] oit.umass.edu
    Looking Back 25 Years: SIGGRAPH 82 Art Show Web Site (http://www.people.umass.edu/sig82art/)
    25 years ago, ACM SIGGRAPH sponsored its first juried public exhibition of experimental two-dimensional, three-dimensional, interactive and time-based works by artists and scientists experimenting with computer graphics technologies. This website provides an overview of that Exhibition, including Historical Perspectives, Original Documents, Interviews, Committees and Lists by Artist.
  3. Interactive Website
    Pedro Meyer
    México
    Email: pedro.zonezero [AT] gmail.com

    ZoneZero.com (http://ZoneZero.com/)
    Interactive Website dedicated to photography, is one of the most visited photography sites on the Internet, with more than 114 million page views in the last three years. ZeroZero exhibitions are in a sense a library, a collection of stories, available at all times since the work stays permanently online and always finds a new audience. The images tell stories of loss (of a loved one, of land for which we fought, of ideals or of the world as we once knew it). They also tell stories of love, of everyday and family life, disease and pain, and great joy and empowerment.
  4. Web Site
    Santiago Echeverry
    University of Tampa
    Tampa, Florida, USA
    Email: secheverry [AT] ut.edu

    www.santi.tv/world
    WORLD is an interactive display of video and audio memories captured with a cell-phone camera in a very low resolution. These personal souvenirs are fragmented into small portions of a larger chaotic and randomized composition. The clips are loaded dynamically, and more elements are added as time goes by.
  5. Web Site
    Julian Konczak
    Southampton Solent University
    Southampton, UK
    Artist Site: www.zerok.tv
    NOTE: When you play this piece on your own computer, it works best to disable the right mouse in System Prefs, and make the cursor invisible.

    Birth and Decay invites the audience to explore a time-sliced anatomy of landscapes as it cycles through the rhythm of change. The vista is hidden, bit the proximity and exploded imagery gives us an intimate relationship with the environment. The birth-decay cycle is an inevitable performance that drives the movement of time on this planet. The images offer 25 instances of the same subject, the decoding multiplicity and diversity.

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