

3D Bodyscans and Rapid Prototyping. 1:9,6 by Karin Sander.

Stainless Steel Counter (10 of 9999).

House and 50 television sets all tuned to the same channel.

Private Conversations with Public Statuary. By Kelly Mark.

Nam June Paik, 1978 by the Vasulkas. Also see the Vasulka Archive.

Bent Scans, 2002 and A So Desu Ka, 1993 by Steina Vasulka.

Doris, 1996 by Woody Vasulka.

“The slow inevitable death of american muscle” by Jonathan Schipper. Two cars are slowly crashed into one another of the course of a month. The movement is so slow as to be invisible.

The Man of Speed’s helmet. By Juneau Projects.

The beauty royale, video installation with sculpted tv, woodchipper and dowel-mounted transducer microphones. A forest, computer system with small pine tree growing in casing.

Good morning captain, video installation with inkjet prints. A video of a scanner being dragged over a forest floor placed alongside printouts of the resulting scans.

Mic campfire. Six microphones were suspended above a large campfire in Grizedale Forest. The microphones were lowered into the fire in turn, the sound was relayed on a pa system. A rich future is still ours. A video installation where sheets of paper with attached transducer microphones are fed through a paper shredder.

An identical enlargement of a camera. At the exhibition, visitors could photograph the room and eachother with the giant camera.

2001, by Sonja Nilsson.

Natural Body Water. Throughout the year 2002–2003 Tavares Strachan collected all of his urine, distilled it, purified it, and bottled it for consumption. The custom bottle label includes all nutritional information.

Survival Kit, Multiple (Edition of 35). This kit consists of hand blown glass elements, metal instruments, and instructions for turning one’s own urine into purified drinking water.

The Problem of One Thing Existing Simultaneously. For this work Strachan duplicated an arbitrarily broken beer bottle piece-by-piece, transforming bits of trash into remnants of displaced matter and time. He used a found broken Budweiser beer bottle as a template to laser cut a duplicate broken bottle piece which rest side by side with the original.


On Human Right’s Day, March 21 (2005), Ruth Sacks paid a pilot to write the words ‘Don’t panic’ in the sky over the Cape Town city bowl. The ‘don’t’ blew away long before the ‘panic’ did.


A series of obese, taxidermised pigeons also by Ruth Sacks.