This Internet-based artwork recreates the aesthetic experience of the web 1.0. A digital archaeology project that explores cities and neighborhoods of the GeoCities platform buried in 2009. For those who knew it, it will be like going back in time. For those who don't, a new discovery. Go to the exhibition: www.espaciobyte.org/camerons-world
www.espaciobyte.org
Cameron's world · Excavating lost cities | Espacio Byte · Digital Art Museum
Cameron's World is a web collage built with images and texts found on the GeoCities pages created between 1994 and 2009. GeoCities was a web-hosting service that allowed people to build their own sites. During the 90s, users from all over the world developed…
Don't miss http://www.espaciobyte.org/crack-on-screen ! - An #exhibition that brings together a selection of works by the PVM collective (Pungas de Villa Martelli), precursor of the #demoscene in #Argentina. #retro #computerart #art #new #artists #8bits #crack #techno #punk #commodore64 #museum
www.espaciobyte.org
Crack on screen | Espacio Byte · Digital Art Museum
This exhibition brings together a selection of works by the PVM collective (Pungas de Villa Martelli), precursors of Argentine demoscene. A journey through various practices such as low-resolution pixel graphics, chiptune compositions, executable programs…
Lee Oliver researches the possibilities of fractal geometry using the same formula to develop his imaginary cities. Urban metaphors that, through the uninhabited landscapes, induce suffocation and despair feelings. Mandelbulbsand Menger Sponges fractals provide him an escape into a virtual space occupied only by himself. A place wherein he can wander endlessly. www.espaciobyte.org/emerging-cities
www.espaciobyte.org
Emerging cities · Lee Oliver | Espacio Byte · Digital Art Museum
A set of unique buildings emerge in a space of pure abstraction. Architecture of complex surfaces stands on infinite labyrinths. Lee Oliver researches the possibilities of fractal geometry using the same formula to develop his imaginary cities.
'Obscure distortion' / Frenetik Void invites us to explore his science-fiction environment, a post-human universe inhabited by mutating beings, hybrids in which the limits are vanished. www.espaciobyte.org/obscure-distortion
www.espaciobyte.org
Obscure distortion · Frenetik Void | Espacio Byte · Digital Art Museum
The work of Frenetik Void unfolds in a science-fiction environment, a post-human universe inhabited by mutating beings, hybrids in which the limits are vanished. Suspended bodies in liquid natures build scenes of surrealistic airs. But if there is something…
Stratotype Digital-ien is an autonomous computer program (bot) that randomly recomposes images of the Quebec landscape in Canada. The function of this mechanism is to transform images taken by artist Isabelle Gagné creating unusual visual occurrences of that territory on the web > http://www.espaciobyte.org/stratotype-en
New show by Pandelis Diamantides: 'Go back to hiding in the shadows' > http://www.espaciobyte.org/go-back-to-hiding-in-the-shadows
New exhibition on visual experiments based on cellular automata. A code writing exercise, as well as an aesthetic search that seeps out of mathematical abstraction.
'Apocryph', Marie-Lou Barbier › http://www.espaciobyte.org/apocryph-en
'Apocryph', Marie-Lou Barbier › http://www.espaciobyte.org/apocryph-en
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
New at EspacioByte.org: 'Altered canons'. In this show, Mark Klink draws on ancient Roman and Greek sculpture models to experiment on their shapes, textures, and colors. Explores new morphologies through software manipulation incorporating glitch aesthetics. Go to the exhibition: http://www.espaciobyte.org/altered-canons
New at EspacioByte.org: Altered canons
In this show, Mark Klink draws on ancient Roman and Greek sculpture models to experiment on their shapes, textures, and colors. Explores new morphologies through software manipulation incorporating glitch aesthetics. Go to the exhibition: http://www.espaciobyte.org/altered-canons
In this show, Mark Klink draws on ancient Roman and Greek sculpture models to experiment on their shapes, textures, and colors. Explores new morphologies through software manipulation incorporating glitch aesthetics. Go to the exhibition: http://www.espaciobyte.org/altered-canons