An exhibition that investigates aspects of observation in contemporary art and explores the relationship between artist, artwork and audience. The act of looking is often socially regulated, but how are these rules changing with developments in the politics of equality and with modern technologies? For example, the work may broach themes including, but not restricted to, identity, narcissism, voyeurism and gender politics</p
Within the ethnographies, memories, and archives produced throughout a capitalist empire, the ‘gaze’...
Gaze Relations is an art installation that visualizes how human gaze and computer vision see bodies ...
© 2012 Annika KoopsThe Portrait as Parasite examines the social, material and psychological conditio...
An exhibition that investigates aspects of observation in contemporary art and explores the relation...
MUSEUM DISPLAYS, whether picturesque arrangements of beauti-ful things, or chronological narratives ...
On Not Looking: The Paradox of Contemporary Visual Culture focuses on the image, and our relationshi...
Over the course of the last 10 years, I think we have seen the influence of the Internet on media to...
In the recent decades, with the rapid proliferation of surveillance systems for both political and c...
Through traditional studio photography, appropriation, and collage techniques, Glance Gaze Look se...
In View is an exhibition that establishes a context from which to explore the tensions and dialogues...
Kalos is the first in a series of exhibitions hosted by the Sevenoaks Kaleidoscope Gallery in 2010 t...
The international exhibition "Looking at Others“ presents twenty contemporary artists with their vid...
This essay looks at the use made by several museums of highly advanced technological and communicati...
The intention of this project is to appraise cultural obsessions with certainty through a review of ...
Control has many facets: It comprises surveillance by others or surveillance by oneself. And yet it ...
Within the ethnographies, memories, and archives produced throughout a capitalist empire, the ‘gaze’...
Gaze Relations is an art installation that visualizes how human gaze and computer vision see bodies ...
© 2012 Annika KoopsThe Portrait as Parasite examines the social, material and psychological conditio...
An exhibition that investigates aspects of observation in contemporary art and explores the relation...
MUSEUM DISPLAYS, whether picturesque arrangements of beauti-ful things, or chronological narratives ...
On Not Looking: The Paradox of Contemporary Visual Culture focuses on the image, and our relationshi...
Over the course of the last 10 years, I think we have seen the influence of the Internet on media to...
In the recent decades, with the rapid proliferation of surveillance systems for both political and c...
Through traditional studio photography, appropriation, and collage techniques, Glance Gaze Look se...
In View is an exhibition that establishes a context from which to explore the tensions and dialogues...
Kalos is the first in a series of exhibitions hosted by the Sevenoaks Kaleidoscope Gallery in 2010 t...
The international exhibition "Looking at Others“ presents twenty contemporary artists with their vid...
This essay looks at the use made by several museums of highly advanced technological and communicati...
The intention of this project is to appraise cultural obsessions with certainty through a review of ...
Control has many facets: It comprises surveillance by others or surveillance by oneself. And yet it ...
Within the ethnographies, memories, and archives produced throughout a capitalist empire, the ‘gaze’...
Gaze Relations is an art installation that visualizes how human gaze and computer vision see bodies ...
© 2012 Annika KoopsThe Portrait as Parasite examines the social, material and psychological conditio...