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Explore the world of immersive installation art where audience participation, personal spaces, and simultaneous events create a sensory journey. Dive into the nomadic experience of virtual tropos and "kaph" in partially buried installations. Discover works by renowned artists like Ann Hamilton and Camille Utterback, where themes of comfort, time, and floating numbers challenge traditional art boundaries.
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Themes in Installation Sensation/Immersion Nomadic Audience participation/interaction Simultaneous events Personal spaces to escape from virtual
Partially Buried http://www.jca-online.com/flow.html
Text rain Untitled 5 http://www.camilleutterback.com/
Ann Hamilton http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/hamilton/clip1.html Renee Green http://www.artnet.com/magazine_pre2000/reviews/mahoney/mahoney12-02-96.asp Flow http://www.jca-online.com/flow.html Joachim Sauter http://www.artcom.de/index.php?lang=en&option=com_acteammember&id=1&Itemid=121 Camille Utterback www.camilleutterback.com Art in Context Images www.artincontext.org Andrea Zittel http://www.zittel.org/
De Oliveria, Nicolas and Nicola Oxley. Installation Art in the New Millennium. London:Thames & Hudson, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art. Comfort: Reclaiming Place in a Virtual World. exh cat., text by Kristin Chambers and Michael Sorkin. Cleveland, 2001 Fundacio Antoni Tapies. Shadows and Signals.exh cat., text by Nuria Enguita Mayo and others. Barcelona, 2000. Musee D’Art Contemporain de Lyon. Ann Hamilton Present-Past 1984-1997. exh cat., text by Thierry Prat and others. Lyon, 1998. Paul, Christiane. Digital Art. London: Thames & Hudson, 2003. Sunderburg, Erika, ed. Space, Site, Intervention: Situating Installation Art. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000.