140
edits
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
== Placeless Space == | == Placeless Space == | ||
… The heightened flow of information through vast media networks has accelerated the creation of a world in which multiple media spaces can exist in any physical place and the same media space can exist in multiple physical spaces. The real and the virtual interpenetrate to such a degree that we have witnessed “a profound cultural shift, permanently altering the way we experience and represent space … marked by speed of mobility through space, the viewing of multiple perspectives simultaneously, … the breakdown of physical boundaries and temporalities.”(Anne Ellegood, “Out of Site: Fictional Architectural Spaces,” 2002, pp.7-11, An exhibition catalog) More and more we | … The heightened flow of information through vast media networks has accelerated the creation of a world in which multiple media spaces can exist in any physical place and the same media space can exist in multiple physical spaces. The real and the virtual interpenetrate to such a degree that we have witnessed “a profound cultural shift, permanently altering the way we experience and represent space … marked by speed of mobility through space, the viewing of multiple perspectives simultaneously, … the breakdown of physical boundaries and temporalities.”(Anne Ellegood, “Out of Site: Fictional Architectural Spaces,” 2002, pp.7-11, An exhibition catalog) More and more we traverse a network of placeless spaces, or spaces that have no fixed geographical location. P.89 | ||
Responding to and representing the digitizing of information, contemporary artists may investigate places that are not tangible but exist only as virtual spaces. P.89 | Responding to and representing the digitizing of information, contemporary artists may investigate places that are not tangible but exist only as virtual spaces. P.89 |
edits