weight, J and Stefans, B K (2004) ‘When you reach Kyoto’ exhibited variously.
A collaboration with Brian Kim Stefan's text, using the concatenation engine.
weight, J and Stefans, B K (2004) ‘When you reach Kyoto’ exhibited variously.
A collaboration with Brian Kim Stefan's text, using the concatenation engine.
Weight, J (2004) Semtexts. Exhibited variously.
Concatenation and the associated works belong to the field of programmed poetics or generative poetry. It is a related to the work of ouLiPan poets such as Raymond Queneau and dada poets such as Tristan Tzara. It also owes a debt to situationist and beat generation chance and recombinant experiments. However, these projects all took place prior to ubiquitous computing. read more »
Concatenation won the 2004 Mayne Award for Multimedia at Adelaide Festival of the Arts. It was featured in National Gallery of Australia, Spatial multimedia exhibition space http://www.nga.gov.au/Spatial/ and ACMI 2004 Australian artists exhibition, Melbourne. A relevant referred journal article is Weight, Jenny (Winter 2006) ‘I, apparatus, you: a technosocial introduction to creative practice’, Convergence 12(4): 413–446. Concatenation was submitted as part of my PhD.
Concatenation and the associated works belong to the field of programmed poetics or generative poetry. It is a related to the work of ouLiPan poets such as Raymond Queneau and dada poets such as Tristan Tzara. It also owes a debt to situationist and beat generation chance and recombinant experiments. However, these projects all took place prior to ubiquitous computing. read more »
Concatenation and the associated works belong to the field of programmed poetics or generative poetry. It is a related to the work of ouLiPan poets such as Raymond Queneau and dada poets such as Tristan Tzara. It also owes a debt to situationist and beat generation chance and recombinant experiments. However, these projects all took place prior to ubiquitous computing. read more »