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White Heat Cold Logic: British Computer Art 19601980 [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 464 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x178x25 mm, weight: 907 g, 63 b&w illus.; 126 Illustrations
  • Serija: Leonardo
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262026538
  • ISBN-13: 9780262026536
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 464 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x178x25 mm, weight: 907 g, 63 b&w illus.; 126 Illustrations
  • Serija: Leonardo
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262026538
  • ISBN-13: 9780262026536
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Technological optimism, even utopianism, was widespread at midcentury; in Britain, Harold Wilson in 1963 promised a new nation "forged from the white heat of the technological revolution." In this heady atmosphere, pioneering artists transformed the cold logic of computing into a new medium for their art and played a central role in connecting technology and culture. White Heat Cold Logic tells the story of these early British digital and computer artists—and fills in a missing chapter in contemporary art history.

In this heroic period of computer art, artists were required to build their own machines, collaborate closely with computer scientists, and learn difficult computer languages. White Heat Cold Logic's chapters, many written by computer art pioneers themselves, describe the influence of cybernetics, with its emphasis on process and interactivity; the connections to the constructivist movement; and the importance of work done in such different venues as commercial animation, fine art schools, and polytechnics.

The advent of personal computing and graphical user interfaces in 1980 signaled the end of an era, and today we do not have so many dreams of technological utopia. And yet our highly technologized and mediated world owes much to these early practitioners, especially for expanding our sense of what we can do with new technologies.

Contributors: Roy Ascott, Stephen Bell, Paul Brown, Stephen Bury, Harold Cohen, Ernest Edmonds, Maria Fernandez, Simon Ford, John Hamilton Frazer, Jeremy Gardiner, Charlie Gere, Adrian Glew, Beryl Graham, Stan Hayward, Graham Howard, Richard Ihnatowicz, Malcolm Le Grice, Tony Longson, Brent MacGregor, George Mallen, Catherine Mason, Jasia Reichardt, Stephen A. R. Scrivener, Brian Reffin Smith, Alan Sutcliffe, Doron D. Swade, John Vince, Richard Wright, Aleksandar Zivanovic.

A Leonardo Book

The history of a pioneering era in computer-based art too often neglected by postwar art histories and institutions.
Series Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction
1(8)
Charlie Gere
Creative Cybernetics: The Emergence of an Art Based on Interaction, Process, and System
9(10)
Roy Ascott
Transmitting Art Triggers: The Early Interactive Work of Stephen Willats
19(18)
Adrian Glew
Interactive Architecture
37(16)
John Hamilton Frazer
``Aesthetically Potent Environments,'' or How Gordon Pask Detourned Instrumental Cybernetics
53(18)
Maria Fernandez
In the Beginning...
71(12)
Jasia Reichardt
Cybernetic Serendipity Revisited
83(12)
Brent MacGregor
The Technologies of Edward Ihnatowicz
95(16)
Aleksandar Zivanovic
Forty Is a Dangerous Age: A Memoir of Edward Ihnatowicz
111(8)
Richard Ihnatowicz
From System to Software: Computer Programming and the Death of Constructivist Art
119(22)
Richard Wright
Reconfiguring
141(10)
Harold Cohen
Reconstruction
151(12)
Tony Longson
Technological Kindergarten: Gustav Metzger and Early Computer Art
163(12)
Simon Ford
Patterns in Context
175(16)
Alan Sutcliffe
Bridging Computing in the Arts and Software Development
191(12)
George Mallen
Two Cultures: Computer Art and the Science Museum
203(16)
Doron D. Swade
Never the Same Again
219(10)
Malcolm Le Grice
Which Art in Heaven
229(16)
Stan Hayward
The Routes toward British Computer Arts: The Role of Cultural Institutions in the Pioneering Period
245(20)
Catherine Mason
From Machine to Metaphor: Artists and Computers at Chelsea School of Art 1960--1980
265(10)
Stephen Bury
From Systems Art to Artificial Life: Early Generative Art at the Slade School of Fine Art
275(16)
Paul Brown
Connections: A Personal History of Computer Art Making from 1971 to 1981
291(16)
Stephen A. R. Scrivener
My First Brush with Computer Graphics
307(16)
Stephen Bell
Conceptual Art, Language, Diagrams, and Indexes
323(22)
Graham Howard
Constructive Computation
345(16)
Ernest Edmonds
PICASO at Middlesex Polytechnic
361(16)
John Vince
From 0 to 1: Art Made between the Times of Having and Not Having a Computer
377(12)
Brian Reffin Smith
The Aftermath of Early Computer Art: A Painter's Odyssey
389(12)
Jeremy Gardiner
The Ironic Heirs to Serendipity: British New Media Art, 1980s to Now
401(20)
Beryl Graham
List of Contributors and Editors 421(10)
Index 431