Screen-based art / / Annette W. Balkema and Henk Slager (editors).

In the 21st century, the screen - the Internet screen, the television screen, the video screen and all sorts of combinations thereof - will be booming in our visual and infotechno culture. Screen-based art, already a prominent and topical part of visual culture in the 1990s, will expand even more. I...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Lier en boog series ; Volume 15
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam ;, Atlanta, Georgia : : Rodopi,, [2000]
©2000
Year of Publication:2000
Language:English
Dutch
Series:Lier en boog series ; Volume 15.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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Table of Contents:
  • Annette W. BALKEMA and Henk SLAGER: Prologue
  • Marie-Luise ANGERER: New Technology and its Subject
  • Annette W. BALKEMA: Desire for the Screen
  • René BEEKMAN: Composing Images
  • Raymond BELLOUR: Challenging Cinema
  • Peter BOGERS: Limitations and Imperfections
  • Joost BOLTEN: The Medium in the Middle
  • Noël CARROLL: Forget the Medium!
  • Sean CUBITT: The Chronoscope
  • Cãlin DAN: Growing Old in New Media
  • Honoré d'O: Theatrical Video
  • Anne-Marie DUQUET: Scenography of the Image
  • Ken FEINGOLD: Contextual Consciousness
  • Symposium Filmic Images
  • Chris DERCON: Still/A Novel
  • Patricia PISTERS: Molecular Processes of Becoming
  • Ed TAN: The Filmic Image as an Icon of Cultural Memory
  • Ursula FROHNE: Illusions of Experience
  • hARTware curators: Observations on Techno-Art
  • Heiner HOLTAPPELS: Topicalism and the Design of Time
  • Aernout MIK: Staged Situations
  • Nicolaus SCHAFHAUSEN: Communication Torture
  • Jeffrey SHAW: Media Art and Interactive Cinema
  • Peter SLOTERDIJK: Neolithic Intelligence
  • Barbara VISSER: Blurring Boundaries
  • Siegfried ZIELINSKI: Time Machines
  • Participants.