Has the Internet Made Everyone an Artist? panel at Internet Week (all photos & screencaps by the author for Hyperallergic) Artists in the digital age and presenting art online, as well as exhibiting ...
How meme culture evolved into a serious digital art movement redefining creativity, ownership, and permanence online.
I have been struck in recent years how the internet has democratized art to the point that people now have immediate—if not imperfectly-reproduced—access to art from around the world. Years ago, one ...
Williamsburg's Internet Garage During the Speed Show (all photos by author) This past Wednesday, June 8, curator Lindsay Howard mounted a guerrilla “Speed Show” at an internet cafe in Williamsburg.
The following essay has been adapted from the new book Internet_Art by Omar Kholeif (Phaidon, 2023), originally published under the title “Curated Desire, Curating ...
Who pays for software these days? Software is either free or is meant to be pirated. That is the implication of our digital culture. Everything on the Internet by default has to be free, or it will be ...
Something I’ve noticed: Almost a decade on, the Berlin art scene is still haunted by its 2016 biennale. The DIS-curated show enters the room whenever “post-internet art” is referenced, or during any ...
Two new visual books, “Internet_Art” and “The Story of NFTs,” explore the history and future of creative consumption online. By Walker Mimms It’s been a tough year for physical art, with works by ...
It was a tale of sex and death and Teletubbies. In 1998, programmer and animator Tom Fulp released an online video game titled “Teletubby Fun Land” that featured the characters from the British ...
Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on Forbes Advisor. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations. If your dream career has you studying classical art or ...
A show at the New Museum celebrates the completion of Rhizome’s Net Art Anthology, a two-year project to preserve and archive digital artworks that were in danger of disappearing. By Sophie Haigney ...
I think that in the future, art will cease to be a stable source of income. It will become impossible for musicians, writers, etc. to sell their music, books, etc. for money. This is because the ...