The presentation of these two projects the metaLAB (at) Harvard complements Jeffrey Schnapp's interview published in the section Perspectives of this issue of Humanist Studies and the Digital Age. The first project, A Flitting Atlas of the Human Gaze, performs an art historical experiment. The second project, Their Names, is an online Denkmal or monument that visualizes the names of 28,000+ fatal encounters with American police dating from the year 2000 up until the death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020
Digital humanities are at the leading edge of applying computer-based technology in the humanities. ...
The Print Screen Festival is hosting 13 international video artists this year exploring the ways in ...
In this article, I briefly discuss a project I co-organized this year in collaboration with Oreen Co...
The interview reconstructs Jeffrey Schnapp's brilliant career from his origins as a scholar of Dante...
Abstract Surprise Machines is a project of experimental museology that sets out to visualize the ent...
The Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) organization was set up in 1966 by the artists Robert...
EliScholar: A Platform for Open Access Scholarly Publishing at Yale University Michael Dula(Chief Te...
As art influences science and technology, science and technology can in turn inspire art. Recognizin...
Abstract Surprise Machines is a project of experimental museology that sets out to visualize the ent...
From the teenager browsing the web in an Internet cafe in Istanbul, to the student in New York seeki...
As computers infiltrate every aspect of human society, new fields of study emerge. A good example is...
Exhibition (2019) and Publication (2020) Funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF)/Programme for ...
The editors of this volume are Rod Coover, an internationally renowned visual anthropologist and dig...
Accompanies an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art from April 17 through June 2, 19...
Over the last 18 months, Office of Experiments, led by artists Neal White and Steve Rowell, have eng...
Digital humanities are at the leading edge of applying computer-based technology in the humanities. ...
The Print Screen Festival is hosting 13 international video artists this year exploring the ways in ...
In this article, I briefly discuss a project I co-organized this year in collaboration with Oreen Co...
The interview reconstructs Jeffrey Schnapp's brilliant career from his origins as a scholar of Dante...
Abstract Surprise Machines is a project of experimental museology that sets out to visualize the ent...
The Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) organization was set up in 1966 by the artists Robert...
EliScholar: A Platform for Open Access Scholarly Publishing at Yale University Michael Dula(Chief Te...
As art influences science and technology, science and technology can in turn inspire art. Recognizin...
Abstract Surprise Machines is a project of experimental museology that sets out to visualize the ent...
From the teenager browsing the web in an Internet cafe in Istanbul, to the student in New York seeki...
As computers infiltrate every aspect of human society, new fields of study emerge. A good example is...
Exhibition (2019) and Publication (2020) Funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF)/Programme for ...
The editors of this volume are Rod Coover, an internationally renowned visual anthropologist and dig...
Accompanies an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art from April 17 through June 2, 19...
Over the last 18 months, Office of Experiments, led by artists Neal White and Steve Rowell, have eng...
Digital humanities are at the leading edge of applying computer-based technology in the humanities. ...
The Print Screen Festival is hosting 13 international video artists this year exploring the ways in ...
In this article, I briefly discuss a project I co-organized this year in collaboration with Oreen Co...