This is the twitter account for the Visual Culture team in the School of Art & Design at the University of Portsmouth. Tweets by @ollygruner or @moohna
Check out this fantastic animated poster from @UniPortBAGD student Josh Langley for the forthcoming Whole Earth events at @UniPortCCI Wednesday 7-9 December. Talks, workshops, exhibitions. Reserve free tickets: https://t.co/KqJO4fzhmA @ollygruner@moohna@danmccabe_
This SPARKS focuses on the work of artists and animators who worked in the 1960’s, 1970’s, and 1980’s. Sign up for a free symposium here https://t.co/sOj4CqJpv3
Interesting to study for students interested in Art activism / climate change: Satirizing news items - changing the name of the Hurricane shows who is behind the causes for climate change that result in extreme weather events such as these (i.e. Oil companies)
Contemporary net art project, shared by @LeonardoISAST with some experimental navigation and some project elements that may be interesting to ponder for Visual culture students interested in Computer arts and AI https://t.co/Stp3i7rNNj
RAL lecture today - 'Following Flexipede’s Footsteps: Software Archaeology and Cybernetic Serendipity' about Tony Pritchett and - arguably- the first computer animated character https://t.co/reLnUTF8IT
First Look: Cyberfeminism Index :: New Museum - online collection of resources for techno-critical works 1990-2020 gathered by Mindy Seu https://t.co/FGhqRBr4Rs
Interesting quote as our L6 prepare their final year project: "People feel that it is very important for artists to have an aim. Actually what's vital is to have a beginning. You find your aim in the process of working. You discover it"
Bridget Riley, 2002
Learn about the history of tattoo art and get a professional photo of your tattoo at a talk on 'Tattoo: British Tattoo Art Revealed' by @mattlodder on 18 Oct 6:30pm in Eldon Building (EW 1.11).
To book a place at the talk visit: https://t.co/muUpQarhzT
@Visualculture1 colleague Simon Hobbs' new book 'Cultivating Extreme Art Cinema: Text, Paratext and Home Video Culture' is now available for reading/borrowing/browsing in @Uoplibrary