livres
$78.00
(disponible en magasin)
Résumé:
This historical survey focuses on female artists who were either working with computer technologies or taking up the subject of computing and cybernetics in their work in the early years of the computer revolution. It documents a lesser-known history of the inception of digital art, countering conventional narratives by focusing entirely on female figures. Comprising more(...)
Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing: 1960-1991
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Prix:
$78.00
(disponible en magasin)
Résumé:
This historical survey focuses on female artists who were either working with computer technologies or taking up the subject of computing and cybernetics in their work in the early years of the computer revolution. It documents a lesser-known history of the inception of digital art, countering conventional narratives by focusing entirely on female figures. Comprising more than 100 works by 50 artists from 14 countries, it spans a period from the first years of integrated circuit computing in the 1960s to the "microcomputer revolution," which led to the birth of home computing in the 1980s. This extensive publication includes three new essays by Tina Rivers Ryan, Margit Rosen and the exhibition's curator, Michelle Cotton. It also features a richly illustrated timeline covering the period between 1613 and 1991 and includes 27 new interviews with artists and over 200 illustrations.
livres
septembre 2025
Théorie de l’art
$35.00
(disponible sur commande)
Résumé:
In the same way that the Helvetica font graphically defined the New York City subway system, the Design Research Unit visually branded the London we know today in everything from its street signs to such corporate identities as British Rail. "Design Research Unit: 1942-72" details the history of the Unit and includes contemporary perspectives by artists, designers and critics.
Design research unit 1942-1972
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$35.00
(disponible sur commande)
Résumé:
In the same way that the Helvetica font graphically defined the New York City subway system, the Design Research Unit visually branded the London we know today in everything from its street signs to such corporate identities as British Rail. "Design Research Unit: 1942-72" details the history of the Unit and includes contemporary perspectives by artists, designers and critics.