In From Technological to Virtual Art, respected historian of art and technology Frank Popper traces the development of immersive, interactive new media art from its historical
antecedents through today's digital, multimedia, and networked art. Popper shows that contemporary virtual art is a further refinement of the technological art of the late twentieth century and
also a departure from it. What is new about this new media art, he argues, is its humanization of technology, its emphasis on interactivity, its philosophical investigation of the real and the
virtual, and its multisensory nature. He argues further that what distinguishes the artists who practice virtual art from traditional artists is their combined commitment to aesthetics and
technology. Their "extra-artistic" goals -- linked to their aesthetic intentions -- concern not only science and society but also basic human needs and drives.
Defining virtual art broadly as art that allows us, through an interface with technology, to immerse ourselves in the image and interact with it, Popper identifies an aesthetic-technological
logic of creation that allows artistic expression through integration with technology. After describing artistic forerunners of virtual art from 1918 to 1983 -- including art that used light,
movement, and electronics -- Popper looks at contemporary new media forms and artists. He surveys works that are digital based but materialized, multimedia offline works, interactive digital
installations, and multimedia online works (net art) by many artists, among them John Maeda, Jenny Holzer, Brenda Laurel, Agnes Hegedus, Stelarc, and Igor Stromajer. The biographical details
included reinforce Popper's idea that technology is humanized by art. Virtual art, he argues, offers a new model for thinking about humanist values in a technological age.
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Modern and Contemporary Arab Art from the Levant: The Majida Mouasher Collection
$1,925 -
Realism in Greek Cinema: From the Post-War Period to the Present
$4,275 -
Beyond Resemblance: Abstract Art in the Age of Global Conceptualism
$1,215 -
Aspects of Abstraction 1952-2007
$1,225 -
Machine Project: The Platinum Collection
$1,748 -
Abstraction in Reverse: The Reconfigured Spectator in Mid-Twentieth-Century Latin American Art
$2,250 -
Sound Art: Sound As a Medium of Art
$2,100 -
Situating Global Art: Topologies – Temporalities – Trajectories
$2,025 -
Max Mannheimer: The Marriage of Colours
$2,025 -
James Mongrain in the George R. Stroemple Collection: Reinterpreting Venetian Tradition
$1,400 -
Leonora Carrington and the international avant-garde
$4,950 -
Hypothesis for an Exhibition
$1,800 -
Roots & Culture: Cultural Politics in the Making of Black Britain
$980 -
The Political Aesthetics of the Armenian Avant-garde: The Journey of the ’Painterly Real’, 1987-2004
$4,950 -
The Avant-Garde Won’t Give Up: Cobra and Its Legacy
$1,748 -
Art Derivatives
$1,398 -
Here / There: Telepresence, Touch, and Art at the Interface
$1,800 -
Garden State
$1,708 -
Winifred Nicholson: Liberation of Colour
$1,328 -
An Inventory of Shimmers: Objects of Intimacy in Contemporary Art
$1,225

