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ART OF THE DIGITAL AGE
Edited by Bruce Wands
The first major illustrated survey of this exciting, new, and
experimental field
Building on the traditions of art history and using advanced technologies,
digital artists push the boundaries of artistic expression and explore
some of the most urgent social, political, and biological issues facing
humankind today.
Traditional activities such as painting and sculpture have been
radically transformed by digital techniques and media, while entirely
new forms, such as Net art, digital installation, and virtual reality,
have emerged as recognized artistic practices, collected by museums,
institutions, and individuals the world over. All the diverse forms are
featured here: digital prints, sculpture, and interactive installations;
DVD and CD-ROMs; digital animation and video; Web sites and software
art; new media performance and music. Bruce Wands presents
an overview of the main characteristics of each category and discusses
in detail specific works selected by a panel of curators as the most
important of their kind.
Quotes, statements, and other texts from digital artists, curators,
and theorists of new media appear throughout the book to provide
further illuminating insights.
An introduction traces the history of digital art from its tentative
beginnings in the 1960s to its full emergence in the 1990s, while the
final chapter speculates on what the future might bring for this rapidly
changing art form. A reference section includes a year-by-year time line
of milestones in digital art, both artistic and technological, an extensive
bibliography, a glossary, and a list of artists' Web sites and online art
projects.
Bruce Wands has been working with digital art for twenty years
as an artist, writer, curator, and teacher. He is a chair of the MFA
Computer Art Department, School of Visual Arts, New York, and
is the author of Digital Creativity.
ALSO OF INTEREST:
Digital Art
New Media in Art
Video Art
ISBN 0-500-23817-0
· 93/8" x 11"
· 250 illustrations · 224 pages · ART
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