Program - Projects A-Z
campus 08 / Exhibitions
DADAgear »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-19:00 Uhr
Schirmmacher
DADAgear is a performative act, which investigates human-to-human interaction and social spaces via smart sweaters. After an ‘introduction’ made by the authros, the public is asked to take part as long as they want.
Exhibitions
Der Gedankenprojektor »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-19:00 Uhr
Landesgalerie Linz
Der Gedankenprojektor (Thought Projector) is based on Nikola Tesla´s technical utopia of a device to photographically depict thoughts.
Take Away (data to go)
Die Form der Unruhe: rebell.tv »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-21:00 Uhr
Pfarrplatz
How is communications behavior being transformed under the impact of digitization? What changes when it’s no longer letterpress printing—a linear-causal sequential array of trains of thought—that characterizes the exchange of ideas among human beings, but rather hyperlinks, connections, relations, conversations?
Exhibitions / Prix Ars Electronica / Ars Foyer
Digital Communities Exhibition »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-19:00 Uhr
Brucknerhaus
Here, the presentation of projects singled out for recognition in the Prix Ars Electronica´s Digital Communities category will be more extensive than in previous years.
Events, Concerts & Performances / Prix Ars Electronica
Digital Musics in Concert »
08.09. | 20:00-22:00 Uhr
Brucknerhaus
Live performances of a selection of the prizewinners in the 2008 Prix Ars Electronica’s Digital Musics category.
campus 08 / Exhibitions
Don´t give up! About a history that doesn´t want to be told »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-19:00 Uhr
Schirmmacher
Don’t give up! is an interactive audiovisual installation where a tension between the system and the interactors is generated.
Events, Concerts & Performances / Take Away (data to go)
dotcom[plot] - NEW! »
08.09. | 20:00-21:00 Uhr
campus 08
DPS (Digital Peep Show) »
04.09. - 09.09. | 10:00-19:00 Uhr
Kunstuniversität Linz / Hauptplatz
Interactive DPS software and its workshop documents by Tomoe Moriyama, cooperated and originally developed by Taizo Matsumura