Issue 70
Screen Play
Welcome to 2009 as we celebrate ANAT’s 21st anniversary year. ANAT has evolved a great deal from its 1984 origin as a research-based project of the Experimental Art Foundation, to becoming a legally and financially autonomous national arts organisation in 1988. (more…)
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Singapore has turned me into a Formalist. I moved to the nation-state after teaching and making art at UCLA where my students and I were creating films about radical left-wing politics, (more…)
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A carefully constructed placement of a screen can bring a difficult piece of video art into a framework that becomes comprehensible to the uninitiated. (more…)
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Warning: this article contains mild nudity.
David Lynch’s screed against films on cell phones has been largely played for laughs but it speaks to a curious chasm (more…)
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Soft light from the high ceiling at prestigious Spiral Hall in Aoyama, Tokyo, reflects on the white wings of a seagull-shaped M-02J jet glider. (more…)
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In the short time span of a few months the media landscape of Los Angeles has undergone a major transformation:
(more…)
The Living Screen is a moving image installation by Bio-Kino (Tanja Visosevic, Guy Ben-Ary and Dr. Bruce Murphy) that anticipates a new interplay between spectator and screen. (more…)
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When was the last time you held a building in your hand? Project Blinkenlights enables viewers to do just that, only they must bring their mobile phones. (more…)
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The dome of the sky is one of the most influential objects on the evolution of human thought. (more…)
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Classification Pending is a permanent public artwork in the Bremer River, Ipswich Parklands, Queensland with modified versions also appearing temporarily in the canvases of the Ooka River (Yokahama) and The Thames (London). (more…)
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In September 2008 Matthew Gingold received ANAT’s Professional Development Travel Grant funding which allowed him to travel from Melbourne, Australia (more…)
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In today’s high-tech world, and with 2009 being ANAT’s 21st anniversary year, our Emerging Technology (ET) labs have never been more necessary. (more…)
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Sound in the public space is still very much a frontier, where the lines are drawn by multiple authorities and exposure to the “public” challenges sound artists with a whole new set of issues and dynamics. (more…)
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In his editorial, Scott Hessels writes about his recent embrace of new forms of screen-based content creation and delivery compared to his earlier approach where content was king. (more…)
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