Art & Technology
Issue 7:2&3 | June 1987
Stephanie Britton & Francesca da Rimini
State of the art information on computer images, electronic music, holography, new video, speculation, manufacture, cad/cam, craft, telelcommunications.
In this issue
Desktop publishing: The new revolution
The genesis of desktop publishing, definition, what it offers the artist and success stories
Introduction
Simulation digitalization interaction: Implications of computing in the Arts
Cleaning up computer graphics
The anthro-cake in the sky
Artists, technology and economic survival
Back and beyond: A brief history of the Australian Art and Technology project
Incentives: Two government initiatives
Making the pace: Interactive video disk computer based training
Computer aided imaging: (Just) another medium
Real hands and pseudo-space
Dianne Mantzaris
Monument 1987
Artist-in-residence: Canberra School of Art and Bureau of Mineral Resources Canberra
From Portapak to Artpak: A preface to the 1987 Sony Video 8 Artpak Workshops
Camera, mythica: Cinderella, the video star
Image through process
Video music, video art, video culture
A video feast: Australian Video Festival
Pieces of 8: New works, Sony Video 8 Workshops
Five frames
The swingshift in video production: Randelli
Structure without substance: Video as architecture
Into the third dimension
Observations of Video 8
Catwoman
Joan Brassil: Stranger Charting
A video installation
Video art, past and future: An enquiry into art and technology
About 20,000 words too few on new media in Europe
On stream: New energy for German video art
The computer since 1804: Jacquard to CAD/CAM
Hands and heads: Manufacture design and craft in Australia
Ideas people: Artists in the industrial sphere
Cutting glass with water: Case history of a technical revolution
The relationship between the body and the object: The body as matrix
At risk: Hazards for Arts workers
Memory theatre 1: A new work by Paula Dawson
Solaris: A new work by Stan Ostoja-Kotkowski
Half a century of electric music
My pianist and other software: A beginner's guide to terms in music technology
Key shift: Some current musical applications of technology in Australia
Fine tuning
Improving the classical guitar with modern technology
Musicians at work with new technologies: The ecstatic moments of Robert Lloyd
Art communicates OK!
Artist as interfacer: Interactive telecommunications systems used by artists
Plunder: Telecommunications research experimentation
Untimely taken: Allan Vizents
Remembrance of things to come
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