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Leonardo

Volume 32, Number 3

Contents

May/June 1999

Leonardo is a print journal, edited by Leonardo/the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, and published by the MIT Press. Subscriptions and individual issues can be ordered from the MIT Press.

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Pages 159-163

The Leonardo Gallery

Cynthia Pannucci, curator: LightForms: Interactive Light Installations


Pages 165-173

Artists' Article

Christa Sommerer with Laurent Mignonneau: Art as a Living System: Interactive Computer Artworks

ABSTRACT

The authors design computer installations that integrate artificial life and real life by means of human-computer interaction. While exploring real-time interaction and evolutionary image processes, visitors to their interactive installations become essential parts of the systems by transferring the individual behaviors, emotions and personalities to the works' image processing. Images in these installations are not static, pre-fixed or predictable, but "living systems" themselves, representing minute changes in the viewers' interactions with the installations' evolutionary image processes.


Pages 175-182

Artists' Statements


Pages 183-189

Theoretical Perspectives on the Arts, Sciences and Technology

Massimo Negrotti: From the Artificial to the Art: A Short Introduction to a Theory and Its Applications

ABSTRACT

The author presents the idea that all human attempts to reproduce natural objects ("exemplars") or their functions---that is, to build artificial objects or processes---unavoidably result in a transfiguration of the exemplars. After introducing the main concepts of a theory of the artificial, the author extends the theory to communication and the arts, both of which provide compelling examples of the generation of artificial objects or processes. The author conceives of art as a paradoxical communication process by which transfiguration does not represent a failure of the reproduction process but, rather, the true objective of the artist.


Pages 191-195

General Article

Patricia Search: Electronic Art and the Law: Intellectual Property Rights in Cyberspace

ABSTRACT

The dematerialization of art that began in the 1960s has reached new heights with the use of electronic media. We are at an important crossroads in defining intellectual property rights that will have a direct impact on the way we create and disseminate electronic art in the future. This paper examines the historical evolution of the definition of "author" in copyright law. The paper shows how current copyright legislation and recent court decisions do not address the plasticity of the medium and the new forms of authorship that are defined by the artistic use of techniques such as virtual reality, artificial intelligence, hypermedia links and collaborative networking.


Pages 197-198

General Note

Rudolf Arnheim: Buildings and Human Figures Aware of Each Other

ABSTRACT

The visual relationship between buildings and human beings is treated as the interaction between two systems: the reality system, dealing with the physical world in and of itself, and the apprehension system, dealing with the world looked at and represented by viewers. The two systems interact in a unitary physical world and can also be depicted in the visual arts.


199-207

Document

Don Foresta, Georges-Albert Kisfaludi and Jonathan Barton.: The Souillac II Conference on Art, Industry and Innovation: Final Report
with an Introduction by Martin Malvy

ABSTRACT

This document builds on the discussion among art and industry representatives documented in "The Souillac Charter for Art and Industry: A Framework for Collaboration" (Leonardo 31, 3 [1998]). Specific projects and project ideas are presented, with the aim of increasing collaboration between artists and the telecommunications industry. Such increased collaboration will result in greater recognition and protection for artists and in greater innovation and creativity for industry.


Pages 209-225

Special Section

The Aesthetic Status of Technological Art


Introduction

Jacques Mandelbrojt, Marcel Frémiot and Roger F. Malina: The Aesthetic Status of Technological Art


Colloquium Presentations


Pages 227-228

Extended Abstract

Jörg Jewanski: What Is the Color of the Tone?


Pages 229-230

Leonardo On-Line Bibliographies


231-238

Reviews

Wilfred Niels Arnold, Molly Beth Hankwitz, Sophie Hampshire, Richard W. Mitchell, Roger F. Malina


239-242

Leonardo/ISAST News






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