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Artificial Being
Artificial Being is an Augmented Reality poem that tries to embody the idea of plurality of experience, inspired by Donna Haraway’s Situated Knowledges. Haraway critiques the notion of a single, objective truth and proposes instead a model of “situated,” plural, and accountable knowledge. By opening the web-viewer (in the link from the QR code) and…
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Becoming Aliens: an essay
My essay Becoming Aliens: Towards a Universal Language for Extra-Terrestrial Communication was published in the special issue of Think Pieces, themed ‘Languages of the Future’. Special thanks to Josh Weeks and Flora Sagers for guest editing this issue and to Marthe Lisson, the editor. Think pieces is the online review of the Institute of Advanced…
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(DYS)TO(PI)A(N) FUTURE! Publication
My Augmented Reality poem (DYS) TO(PI) A(N) FUTURE! was published in Re-Mediate Litmag, Issue 3! (Scroll down to find it, or look at it here.) Dystopian Future is an Augmented Reality poem that exists in two realities at the same time. By opening the web-viewer (in the link) and pointing it at the poem, you’re…
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Re-Mediate Reading
Honored to be reading my new Augmented Reality poem “(DYS)TO(PI)A(N) FUTURE!” at the Second Tuesday Salon of the Electronic Literature Organization dedicated to the launch of Re-Mediate Litmag Issue 3!
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Poem: A Bit of Surveillance
Berlin’s most sympathetic journal, Reality Scratch, published my UML poem “A Bit of Surveillance”. Thanks to editors Melissa Frost and Thomas McDonald and all the other authors for this great issue! This poem was constructed using UML (Unified Modeling Language), a modeling tool for software systems. To create the diagram and try and capture the current precarious moment in tech affairs, I used PlantText (the expert’s design…
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Hromovyi Kamin’
Together with artist Letta Shtohryn and artist-researcher Daniela Brill Estrada, I’m working on the CGI-documentary with working title Hromovyi Kamin’ (Ukrainian for “Thunderstone”). In 1866, Europe’s largest meteorite fell in the village of Knyahinya, in the Ukrainian Carpathians — then part of the Austrian Empire. Knyahinya’s well-witnessed fall inspired paintings, fiction, as well as scientific…