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Judy Malloy - Hyperfiction. Judy Malloy, editor, Women, Art & Technology, Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2003 - "...A rich source of information about the women and works that have made media arts history -- or should. Not only is it a must-read but it is also a must-have... " - Dene Grigar, American Book Review...2012 edition: Women in New Media Website Judy Malloy, "Authoring Systems", The Johns Hopkins Guide to Digital Media and Textuality, in press Judy Malloy and Sonya Rapoport, Objective Connections, Spaces of Life: The Art of Sonya Rapoport, Mills College Art Museum, January 18-March 11, 2012 Documentation Artwork of our work, created for Generations: The Lineage of Influence in Bay Area Art a celebration of the Richmond Art Center's 60th Anniversary, 1996 Judy Malloy, The Electronic Manuscript, Authoring Software, 2011 Judy Malloy, "Travels with Contemporary New Media Art", Grantmakers in the Arts GIA Reader, 21:2, Summer 2010 Judy Malloy, "Creative Approaches to New Media", in D.

Tate Collection: British art and international modern and contemporary art. Scott, Jill: Frontiers of Utopia. Jill Scott«Frontiers of Utopia» «Frontiers of Utopia» is the final part of an interactive series exploring the «history and nature of idealism, technology and design». In the first two parts, «Machinedreams» (1991) and «Paradise Tossed» (1993) the relationship between desire, design and memory was explored in a stylised and dreamy manner. The viewer was able to construct a collage of sounds and images from 1900, 1930, 1960, 1990 by moving through both real and virtual space, their movement triggering sounds or by using icons on a touch sensitive screen.

In this way they became time travellers, making interesting associations as well as learning about history in a new way. «Frontiers of Utopia» presents the viewer with the politics of the ideal society from the points of view of eight different female characters from these same time zones. (Source: Jill Scott Homepage) Jill Scott. Ken goldberg, professor, uc berkeley.

The Telegarden Website. 1995-2004, Ars Electronica Museum, Linz Austria. Co-directors: Ken Goldberg and Joseph Santarromana Project Team: George Bekey, Steven Gentner, Rosemary Morris Carl Sutter, Jeff Wiegley Ars Electronica team: Erich Berger, Gerold Hofstadler, Thomas Steindl, Gerfried Stocker Archivist: Hannes Mayer "Il faut cultiver notre jardin. " Voltaire The Telegarden is an art installation that allows web users to view and interact with a remote garden filled with living plants. Members can plant, water, and monitor the progress of seedlings via the tender movements of an industrial robot arm. New! The Telegarden was developed at the University of Southern California and went online in June 1995. . [ The Telegarden community salutes the memory of our friend Hannes "Captain" Mayer, 1976-2010. ] The Telegarden went online in June of 1995 and has been online continuously for seven years.

For a sociological study of community in the Telegarden: "Virtual Community in a Telepresence Environment," Margaret L. Mark napier at DAM Berlin december 2009.