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blasttheory favorited a video
(4 days ago)

The recording you hear is of a phone call made in September 2009 as part...
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The recording you hear is of a phone call made in September 2009 as part of You Get Me, a mixed reality game commissioned by the Royal Opera House. Jack is talking to a player of the game about his future. The video is of a rain storm on the motorway between Taichung and Taipei. Blast Theory is renowned internationally as one of the most adventurous artists' groups using interactive media, creating groundbreaking new forms of performance and interactive art that mixes audiences across the internet, live performance and digital broadcasting. Led by Matt Adams, Ju Row Farr and Nick Tandavanitj, the groups work explores interactivity and the social and political aspects of technology. It confronts a media saturated world in which popular culture rules, using performance, installation, video, mobile and online technologies to ask questions about the ideologies present in the information that envelops us. www.blasttheory.co.uk
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blasttheory uploaded a new video
(3 weeks ago)
Documentation of the Atomic performance at CASCO in Utrecht in 1998. Pre...
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Documentation of the Atomic performance at CASCO in Utrecht in 1998. Premiered at Kunstlerhaus Betthanien in Berlin, 1997.
For further information go to www.blasttheory.co.uk.
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blasttheory uploaded a new video
(3 weeks ago)
Desert Rain has become a significant work in the world of performance an...
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Desert Rain has become a significant work in the world of performance and new media. It is a game, an installation and a performance placing particpants in a collaborative virtual environment and sending them on a mission into a virtual world. In a world where Gulf War images echo Hollywood images, where Norman Schwarzkopf blurs into Arnold Schwarzenegger, Desert Rain looks for the feint line between the real and the fictional.
Standing on a footplate and zipped into a cubicle, each of the six team members explores motels, deserts and underground bunkers, communicating with each other within the virtual world . . . a world projected onto a screen of falling water. You have 30 minutes to find the target, complete the mission, and get to the final room, where others may have a very different idea of what actually happened out there.
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blasttheory uploaded a new video
(3 weeks ago)
Day Of The Figurines continues Blast Theory's enquiry into the nature of...
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Day Of The Figurines continues Blast Theory's enquiry into the nature of public participation within artworks and within electronic spaces (here, through SMS). It uses emergent behaviour and social dynamics as a means of structuring a live event. It invites players to establish their own codes of behaviour and morality within a parallel world. It plays on the tension between the intimacy and anonymity of text messages, building on previous projects such as Uncle Roy All Around You, I Like Frank and the award-winning Can You See Me Now?
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blasttheory uploaded a new video
(3 weeks ago)
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