Space Art: Difference between revisions

From Medien Wiki
Line 50: Line 50:
* Eva and Franco Mattes a.k.a. 0100101110101101.ORG
* Eva and Franco Mattes a.k.a. 0100101110101101.ORG
** [http://www.0100101110101101.org/home/vopos VOPOS] A Self-surveillance System for Complete Digital Transparency
** [http://www.0100101110101101.org/home/vopos VOPOS] A Self-surveillance System for Complete Digital Transparency
* [http://jimmymcbride.com Jimmy McBride]
* [http://www.ffur.de Agnes Meyer-Brandis] *1973 is mimicking scientific research: she interacts with the public when creating a meteor crater in space or practising movement in space-suits.
* [http://www.ffur.de Agnes Meyer-Brandis] *1973 is mimicking scientific research: she interacts with the public when creating a meteor crater in space or practising movement in space-suits.
** [http://www.forschungsfloss.de/impact/index.html  Impact]], public Meteorit-Watching (2009)
** [http://www.forschungsfloss.de/impact/index.html  Impact]], public Meteorit-Watching (2009)

Revision as of 11:54, 11 March 2011

This list tries to put together artists in the context of a contemporary art practice who relate to space in their work. This contrasts to what the term space art refers in the wikipedia. If you perform a search on Google:Space Art you'll see that he term space art is generally associated with science fiction style illustrations of outer space. The article wikipedia:Space Art is heavily edited by members of the International Association of Astronomical Artists which feature cheesy pictures of astronauts, space craft and colorful planetary scenery. Since the Hubble Space Telescope delivers even more spectacular images then previsioned by air-brush illustrators the demand for “artistic” renderings of the outer space has arguably declined, the IAAA's website looks like it's from the 90ies.

Artists

Groups, institutions, collectives

See also

  • GPS for locative media artworks.