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.
Far too often great art on the Internet gets lost amidst the clutter of virtual mediocrity, or simply gets far too buried in the “shared” list of your RSS aggregator of choice. We’ve done the ...
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 ...
When were you last in a museum? There’s a good chance that one of your most recent museum visits was a virtual one. Especially during global lockdowns – but even before 2020 – museums have offered ...
Kholeif (Time, Forward!), senior curator at the Sharjah Art Foundation, charts the history of internet art in this exciting outing. Beginning in 1989 with the ...
The Internet was once warm. Children felt it. You loaded a page on AOL or Netscape and each graphic seemed tangible, squishy: a floor of colorful, soft puzzle pieces. I began as an 8-year-old, around ...
Online art sales rose a modest 6% last year to US$10.8 billion, proving that the internet has become a familiar, trusted part of the market, but also that collectors prefer to buy works of art in real ...