Digital images are produced by humans and autonomous devices everywhere and, increasingly, ‘everywhen’. Legacy image data, like Mary Shelley’s infamous monster, can be stitched together as either smooth and eloquent, or jagged and abominable, supplementary combinations from various times to create a thought-provoking and/or repulsive Frankensteinian assemblage composed, like most archaeological assemblages, of messy temporal components combining, as Gavin Lucas sums it up, as “a mixture of things from different times and with different life histories but which co-exist here and now”. In this paper, we take a subversive Virtual Art/Archaeology approach, adopting Jacques Derrida’s notion of the ‘supplement’, to explore the temporality of arch...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...
This paper discusses artworks that experiment with digital technologies, using them in ways beyond t...
The traditional presentation about historical time-passing consists in a linear succession of facts ...
Digital images are everywhere and, increasingly, everywhen. In addition to the amorphous phenomenon ...
This chapter explores the multiple temporalities and materialities of art/archaeol- ogy. The authors...
Archaeology is the discipline that is concerned with the understanding of past human behaviours thro...
This paper presents a diffractive dialogue between prehistoric imagery, digital or computational ima...
Computer graphics has become a popular way of interpreting past environments, for educational and en...
This paper presents a diffractive dialogue between ethnographic accounts of imagery, digital or comp...
The paper addresses the relationship between design and the digital humanities, asking what each can...
Project INDIGO aims to document, disseminate and analyse the contemporary graffiti-scape surrounding...
This chapter is based on a paper given at Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA) London, 5-7 Ju...
William Gibson once remarked that what distinguishes human beings from animals is the externalizatio...
The adoption of 3D imaging techniques into fine art practice redefines conventional typological dist...
The landscapes and monuments of the megalithic invoke a distinct remembering of time forgotten. More...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...
This paper discusses artworks that experiment with digital technologies, using them in ways beyond t...
The traditional presentation about historical time-passing consists in a linear succession of facts ...
Digital images are everywhere and, increasingly, everywhen. In addition to the amorphous phenomenon ...
This chapter explores the multiple temporalities and materialities of art/archaeol- ogy. The authors...
Archaeology is the discipline that is concerned with the understanding of past human behaviours thro...
This paper presents a diffractive dialogue between prehistoric imagery, digital or computational ima...
Computer graphics has become a popular way of interpreting past environments, for educational and en...
This paper presents a diffractive dialogue between ethnographic accounts of imagery, digital or comp...
The paper addresses the relationship between design and the digital humanities, asking what each can...
Project INDIGO aims to document, disseminate and analyse the contemporary graffiti-scape surrounding...
This chapter is based on a paper given at Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA) London, 5-7 Ju...
William Gibson once remarked that what distinguishes human beings from animals is the externalizatio...
The adoption of 3D imaging techniques into fine art practice redefines conventional typological dist...
The landscapes and monuments of the megalithic invoke a distinct remembering of time forgotten. More...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...
This paper discusses artworks that experiment with digital technologies, using them in ways beyond t...
The traditional presentation about historical time-passing consists in a linear succession of facts ...