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In unserem Online-Archiv findest du Materialien aus mehr als 30 Jahren transmediale. Durchsuche 12.000 Kunstwerke, Veranstaltungen, ehemalige Teilnehmer*innen und Kurator*innen sowie Texte, um unsere Festivalgeschichte zu erkunden.
Displaying 3941 - 3960 of 4509
B'Tselem Camera Project
Year: 
2014
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Goodiepal
Format: 
installation
performance
Edition: 
2015
Ellie Harrison
Edition: 
2015
Sam Meech
Edition: 
2015
Tehching Hsieh
Year: 
2000
Format: 
installation
Edition: 
2015
Tuur Van Balen
Revital Cohen
Year: 
2013
Format: 
film/video
installation
Edition: 
2015
Oliver Walker
Format: 
film/video
installation
Edition: 
2015
Tobias Revell
Edition: 
2015
Karen Mirza & Brad Butler
Year: 
2014
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Year: 
1978
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Teboho Edkins
Year: 
2013
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Teboho Edkins
Year: 
2011
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Christian von Borries
Year: 
2013
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Mélanie Baoud
Nallini Menamkat
Zaq Chojecki
Year: 
2012
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Arash Nassiri
Year: 
2014
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Semiconductor
Year: 
2012
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Patrick Lichty
Year: 
2014
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Emily Pelstring
Year: 
2013
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Gary Hill
Year: 
1977
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015
Jean Painlevé
Year: 
1978
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2015

Seiten

/artwork

Erik Bünger
Year: 
2006
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
2007

/event

Related participants: 
Andreas Broeckmann
Timothy Druckrey
Date: 
30.01.2008
Format: 
Panel

/person

/text

The current issue of A Peer-reviewed Journal About Post-digital Research (Volume 4 issue 1) is now online. This issue examines the implications of datafication for research. It addresses the thematic framework of the 2015 transmediale festival “Capture All” as a research topic: “to investigate and propose actions that push against the limits of today’s pervasive quantification of life, work and play”, as the call explains. Indeed, to what extent does data “capture all” – even research?