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The SpringArt › topic 51

virtual art galleries on the web

topic 51 · 10 responses
~terry Tue, Jan 22, 2002 (14:58) seed
Discussion of using the web as a virtual gallery for art. This is something that intrigues me and I've thought of collaborating with several local Austin artists in creating virtual galleries.
~terry Tue, Jan 22, 2002 (14:59) #1
I'll dig up some examples. Here's one for starters. http://www.well.com/~chrys/
~terry Tue, Jan 22, 2002 (15:02) #2
http://www.guggenheim.com/index2.html
~wolf Wed, Jan 23, 2002 (22:09) #3
a lot of folks display their work on their websites, for sale or not. i went into one virtual place where it was like you walked through it (3d website).
~terry Thu, Apr 18, 2002 (09:07) #4
Here's a new one by a guy who used to caretake and work on my property, Les Warren: http://www.leswarren.com It's black and white photography, and he has a studio set up on Main Street in Smithville.
~terry Mon, May 13, 2002 (10:51) #5
http://www.digitalapocalypse.com/gallery.html I've heard this is amazing, so I plan to take a look soon.
~wolf Mon, May 13, 2002 (18:11) #6
very interesting and strange!
~terry Sun, Oct 27, 2002 (18:23) #7
Dennis Wilen: www.spacebrothers.com/art/rocktober.jpg www.spacebrothers.com/art/moondog.jpg www.spacebrothers.com/art/shmoo.jpg www.spacebrothers.com/art/smoove.jpg
~terry Tue, Oct 29, 2002 (08:10) #8
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/28/arts/design/28ARTS.html?tntemail0 Concrete Dreams: Actual Museums With Virtual Art By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL The United States is a curio cabinet of quirky museums. Among them are the Mount Horeb Mustard Museum in Wisconsin, the Children's Garbage Museum in Stratford, Conn., and the National Museum of Funeral History in Houston. But there's a gap. Despite the pride that Americans take in our technological prowess, this country � unlike Austria, Germany, the Netherlands and Japan � does not yet have a major institution devoted to Internet-based art works and other forms of computer art.
~terry Thu, Dec 26, 2002 (13:15) #9
SITO. Digital art. The level of quality is incredible, considering that there's no editorial control. People post whatever they want. http://www.sito.org/cgi-bin/news/flash Bookmark this page. Visit it two or three times a week. Electronic Museum of Mail Art (EMMA) http://www.actlab.utexas.edu/emma/Intro/intro2.html Mostly old stuff (circa 1996) but very good quality. Mail Artists. http://www.art.net/~kiyotei http://www.natalukas.com/pages/mail.htm
~terry Thu, Dec 26, 2002 (22:50) #10
Sito.org is great. If you're in to adventure and serendipity.
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