Issues

Issue 43:2 | Wirltuti / Spring 2023 | After AI
After AI
Issue 43:2 | Wirltuti / Spring 2023
Issue 40:4 | December 2020 | Biopic
Biopic
Issue 40:4 | December 2020
Issue 38:4 | December 2018 | Virtual Reality: Ways of Seeing
Virtual Reality: Ways of Seeing
Issue 38:4 | December 2018
Issue 37:1| March 2017 | Data Visual
Data Visual
Issue 37:1| March 2017
Issue 36:4, December 2016 | Parallel Universe
Parallel Universe
Issue 36:4, December 2016
Issue 34:3 | September 2014 | Bio Art
Bio Art
Issue 34:3 | September 2014
Issue 32:1 | March 2012 | Pattern & Complexity
Pattern & Complexity
Issue 32:1 | March 2012
Issue 29:3 | September 2009 | Rational / Emotional
Rational / Emotional
Issue 29:3 | September 2009
Issue 29:2 | June 2009 | After the Missionaries
After the Missionaries
Issue 29:2 | June 2009
Issue 27:3 | September 2007 | Screen Deep
Screen Deep
Issue 27:3 | September 2007
Issue 27:1 | March 2007 | The Word As Art
The Word As Art
Issue 27:1 | March 2007
Issue 25:4 | December 2005 | Ecology: Everyone's Business
Ecology: Everyone's Business
Issue 25:4 | December 2005
Issue 25:1 | March 2005 | Handmade: The New Labour
Handmade: The New Labour
Issue 25:1 | March 2005
Issue 24:1 | March 2004 | Adelaide and Beyond
Adelaide and Beyond
Issue 24:1 | March 2004
Issue 12:2 | June 1992 | Thinking Craft, Crafting Thought
Thinking Craft, Crafting Thought
Issue 12:2 | June 1992
Issue 12:1 | March 1992 | Museums on the Edge
Museums on the Edge
Issue 12:1 | March 1992

Articles

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Choreography of the elements: Janet Echelman
American artist Janet Echelman reshapes urban airspace with monumental, fluidly moving sculpture that responds to environmental forces including wind, water, and sunlight. The artist’s ongoing series of aerial net sculptures started in 1997 when she was in India as a Fulbright Scholar and became fascinated with the beauty and movement of traditional fishing nets. In 2011 her installation 'Tsunami 1.26' hung over the Town Hall traffic intersection in Sydney as a joint initiative of the Powerhouse Museum and Art and About Sydney.
1.154
Notes to Bennett
Gordon Bennett 1955–2014
0.825
Out of darkness
Mazie Turner 1954–2014
1.208
Australian Art: A History
By Sasha Grishin
Miegunyah Press, 2014
570 pp.
0.728187919463087248322148
The inchworm revisited
Artist, writer and honorary visiting Professor at the Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics at the University of Sussex in England Paul Brown sketches out the long intertwining history of the relationship between C.P. Snow's two cultures - art and science, design and mathematics, beauty and computation, and extrapolates upon Lady Ada Lovelace's famous words: "We may say most aptly that the Analytical Engine weaves algebraical patterns just as the Jacquard-loom weaves flowers and leaves."
0.796
Fractal food
John Walker is the founder of Autodesk, Inc. and co-author of AutoCAD. In Fractal Food he discusses the marvel of fractal forms (complex shapes which look more or less the same at a wide variety of scale factors) as they are seen in a rather wonderful vegetable - the chou Romanesco.
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Openwork patterns: Love Lace
Powerhouse Museum Curator of Textiles Lindie Ward discusses the groundbreaking 'Love Lace' exhibition on show at the Powerhouse until April 2013. A globally sourced series of works it showcases 130 designs for openwork structures from 20 countries.
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A Meme is born
Adelaide writer and artist Peter Drew looks at various examples of recent street art and the many ways it is circulated and reproduced as a meme in a wired and globally connected world. "As it turns out," he says, "memetics can be very useful in understanding the patterns of street art."
0.651125401929260450160772
Not just black and white
Scholar and inaugural director of the new Godinymayin Yijard Rivers Arts and Culture Centre in Katherine Cath Bowdler discusses the work of two indigenous artists Brook Andrew and Gunybi Ganambarr and suggests that they are both operating at a conceptual level as bricoleurs in a globalised world, inventing new juxtapositions of materials and revealing new ways of seeing the world through the prism of local histories and traditions.
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