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Special Section: Live Art and Science on the Internet
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2007) 40 (1): 30.
Published: 01 February 2007
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2007) 40 (1): 31–36.
Published: 01 February 2007
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ABSTRACT The author discusses her on-line interactive telerobotic work ELIZA REDUX , its sources and the emblematic use of the psychoanalyst/analysand relationship as a performative vehicle.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2007) 40 (1): 37–42.
Published: 01 February 2007
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ABSTRACT The author describes The Wigglism Manifesto, a work authored amidst the fury of early exchange on the World Wide Web. The term Wigglism refers to a quality shared by biological and artificial life forms alike. The manifesto has taken an open-source approach to its cultivation, allowing numerous voices to nurture the entity into being. This collective approach to truth cultivation embodied by the manifesto was inspired, in part, by the author's experiences with community-based media rituals in the North Brooklyn community before it gentrified in the mid-1990s. The project has affirmed its initiator's sense that cultivating a living system can be a vital alternative to traditional creative practices more aligned with manufacturing and commerce.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2005) 38 (3): 202–206.
Published: 01 June 2005
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The web site mouchette.org is animated by the persona of Mouchette, an on-line identity created by an anonymous artist. The interview presented here sets out the artist's purposes in creating Mouchette and the understanding of on-line experience underlying the work shown on the site.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2005) 38 (3): 213–218.
Published: 01 June 2005
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The authors discuss what they term “media commedia”: performance works melding comedic performance traditions with new media technologies. They focus on The Roman Forum Project, a series of mixed-reality performance projects they produced whose subject is contemporary American politics and media as seen through the eyes of ancient Romans. They discuss the developing relationship between the Internet and public discourse; their use of avatars to explore the boundaries between performance and identity; their use of the Internet as an improvisational space; and the mise en abyme effects of working with mixed realities (including text-based virtual worlds).
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Leonardo (2005) 38 (3): 208–212.
Published: 01 June 2005
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The author discusses the construction of synthetic female cyborgian agents that expand singular identity into a networked trajectory composed of flowing data that cannibalizes processed information, which mutates into re-expressed, unpredictable patterns.