Sandrine Deumier
Although the key word in ‘video art’ is ‘video’, there is no exhaustive list of possible applications of the medium, and its interactions with physical world. Sandrine Deumier’s work opens various topics of discussion, from application of modern technology in art to the very nature of art. Computer-generated 3D animation
Read on!Ilaria Pezone
Just as painting covers a multitude of genres and styles, without ceasing to be painting, video art has a versatility of its own. From electronic manipulation to video performance, from a slide show to a short film, video often has more in common with painting then it does with motion
Read on!Pierre Ajavon
Fortunately, the innumerable attempts to classify art fail more often than not. Defining genres, media, social position of the artist, artistic movement, or historical context, may make for a good story, or an interesting critical exercise, or even a nearly scientific excursion, but it does very little to enhance the experience of
Read on!Eija Temisevä
Eija Temisevä is a Finnish artist, who had drifted from sculpture to video a few years ago. Superimposed, desaturated images, interlaced within themselves and with each other, create a poetic and reflective landscape that is both real and imaginary. That single moment of existence when one is feeling intensely alive is built as
Read on!Lorenzo Papanti
Lorenzo Papanti is an artist working mainly in the field of video art. Black and white silent video seems to be a medium of choice. The split-screen technique emphasizes the investigative nature of his work. Counter-imposed, mirrored, contrasted, point-of-view-changed, performance of body and the body parts form the surreality of Lorenzo’s creative
Read on!Lydia Gyurina
Lydia Gyurina’s use of the medium inevitably sends one back to the 1960s, when unique features of the hand-held camera defined the nature of viewers’ experience: immediacy of videotape playback not available in other media. The unassuming simplicity of the image speaks of this immediacy. There is something strangely mesmerizing about watching a
Read on!Yoon Suok-Won
The Value. Digital video. © Yoon Suok-Won. Following the seemingly minimal linear narrative of Yoon Suok-Won’s work quickly turns into an immersive experience. An inquisitive meandering paths of thoughts, feelings and reflections orchestrated into a gentle elegy of life. It is quintessentially representative of video as an art form where time based
Read on!Things We Wear Private View
Thank you all for making the show a success @Ralph Klewitz, @Susanna Sanroman, @Clair Bain, @Alfred Hernandes, Andrew Neil Hayes, Roland Wegerer, Benoit Maubrey, @Megan Leigh Hellig, Natalja Kondratova, @Elisabet Palomo Solà, @Chun-Yu Chen, India Roper-Evans, @Emma Roper-evans,@Benoit Maubrey, @In Dresses Veritas, @Avloni Academy of Music in Cupertino, CA. Things
Read on!Featured: Megan-Leigh Heilig
Born in 1993 in Nelspruit South Africa, Megan-Leigh Heilig grew up in Johannesburg, graduated from the University of the Witwatersrand with a Bachelor in Fine Art (BFA) in 2015 and is currently studying towards a Masters in Fine Art (MFA) at the University of Cape Town. She works primarily in
Read on!Featured: Benoît Maubrey
Audio Geishas, Electroacoustic kimonos with samplers, their sounds are triggered via light sensors and dancers’ movements. Benoit Maubrey was born in Washington D.C. in 1952 to French parents. In 1979, he transplanted to Berlin fortuitously placing himself in the raucous experimental 1980’s Berlin scene, where sound art luminaries such as John
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