306,505 research outputs found
Drifting through the looking glass [a road less travelled] making living books with old and new tools
From Winchester, UK, artist Danny Aldred acts as a stationary, virtual flaneur, processing a far-away geography understood through Google Earth. He selects and transmits his experience of the area surrounding Street Road image by image via fax. The viewer is in turn invited to experience this re-invented version of the very landscape that surrounds him or her through the artist’s digital eye, traveling to unfamiliar territory both within a close radius and across continents.The images, which rhythmically and somewhat loudly enter the gallery space at regular intervals through a hanging fax machine, are fleeting, fragmented, sometimes eerie, pieces of a puzzle which doesn’t quite add up to anything akin to physical reality. The fax, a near obsolete technology, was almost comically difficult to set-up. We first had to track down the kind of fax machine, which would take rolls of paper, on Craigslist, then tinker with it over a significant length of time to get it to print continuously, and test it through internet fax service. In the end, (arrivals) 3531 miles and back again presents us with a convergence of different technologies (fax, satellite imaging, e-mail and data sharing) and art discourses (eastern scroll painting, romantic landscape painting, digital and conceptual art in the post-modern tradition) creating a layered experience of space and a slightly disorienting effect. In A Road Less Traveled, Aldred invites viewers to participate in this subjective map-making of Route 41, to add their own pieces to the puzzle. Multiple processors/participants are introduced and the scroll becomes a never-ending map of subjective geographies.<br/
TXTSPK // MW4MW
To Compute the Meaning of Words: the Digital Economy the Beginning of the end and the language of Things by Danny Aldred. Questioning authorship and challenging the ideas of production, my response references identity & exploitation, capturing the ideas of consumerism from both sides of culture and then using these same methods to present it back to the viewer. 1/ inboxes: txtspk: series of text-works using unedited sms messages received 2008 - 2009 / nokia 6500s. 2/ mw4mw: sousveillance activity / captured from various website then digitally collaged & cut-ou
Was post-digital better?
The book includes texts by Verena Kuni, Jan Distelmeyer, Manuel Bürger, Clemens Jahn, Nina Franz and a conversation among Danny Aldred, Kristoffer Gansing and Siegfried Zielinski. As a result of a seminar held at the Berlin University of the Arts, it documents the outcomes of the students confronted with the notion of “post-digital
The liberation of good over bad
"Ten Days at the Laundry" The Yard an artist studio collective curated an Exhibiton and Event at an alternative venue at the Hyde Laundry Premises in the heart of Winchester. This project brought together artists from different creative groups in Winchester in an sequence of events that cover a range of contrasting disciples never put together in Winchester befor
Alfred Sohn-Rethel: forma-merce e forma-pensiero
Il contributo cerca di definire la posizione teorica di Aldred Sohn-Rethel in rapporto alla riflessione di Alfred Schmidt, Alexandre Koyré e George Thomson
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Which is The: 49 Views
In September of 2011, I spent a week driving along and across the Irish border, beginning on the north coast near Derry and ending at the shores of the Irish Sea near Warrenpoint. At each crossing I selected a spot with a view across the landscape. I observed and recorded the details in a notebook. These observations were purely factual, ranging from the smallest detail to the most general aspect. The task was simply to, as accurately as possible, put down what I could perceive in front of me.These pages of text are combined with Google map samples of the precise area that each recording was made at in order to create double page spreads of text and image
Use of problem-based learning in Canadian and U.S. dental schools: results of a survey
Copyright © 2002 Journal of the Canadian Dental Association Authored by The International Dental Problem-Based Learning Network.Clark, DC; Aldred, MJ; Aldred, SE; Schuler, C; Wang, HC; Petersson, K; Nilner, M; Svensäter, G; Rohlin, M; Winning, T; Corbet, E; Coulter, I; Songpaisan, Y; McCreary, C
Restricted matching in graphs of small genus
AbstractA graph G with at least 2n+2 vertices is said to be n-extendable if every set of n disjoint edges in G extends to (i.e., is a subset of) a perfect matching. More generally, a graph is said to have property E(m,n) if, for every matching M of size m and every matching N of size n in G such that M∩N=0̸, there is a perfect matching F in G such that M⊆F, but F∩N=0̸. G is said to have property E(0,0) if it has a perfect matching. The study of the properties E(m,n) is referred to as the study of restricted matching extension.In [M. Porteous, R. Aldred, Matching extensions with prescribed and forbidden edges, Australas. J. Combin. 13 (1996) 163–174; M. Porteous, Generalizing matching extensions, M.A. Thesis, University of Otago, 1995; A. McGregor-Macdonald, The E(m,n) property, M.Sc. Thesis, University of Otago, 2000], Porteous and Aldred, Porteous and McGregor-Macdonald, respectively, studied the possible implications among the properties E(m,n) for various values of m and n. In an earlier paper [R.E.L. Aldred, Michael D. Plummer, On restricted matching extension in planar graphs, in: 17th British Combinatorial Conference (Canterbury 1999), Discrete Math. 231 (2001) 73–79], the present authors completely determined which of the various properties E(m,n) always hold, sometimes hold and never hold for graphs embedded in the plane. In the present paper, we do the same for embeddings in the projective plane, the torus and the Klein bottle
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