Underscores.

. Art

26.10.01 Underscore.
'Under_score: Net Art, Sound and Essays from Australia' is an exhibition organized by BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music) in New York. Nine Australian artists are considered to be particularly representative, for which the Internet has been the most significant medium of expression, particularly in a country fertile in the production of electronic art. Works by: Francesca da Rimini ('Gashgirl' on erotic relationships and sexual taboos), Melinda Rackham ('Empyrean', visual spaces and breathtaking three-dimensional sound), Rice ('Geniwate', an aural work that recounts the journey of a Australian white woman in the post-colonial Vietnam), Ian Haig ('Web Devolution', on the concept of digital evangelism, ie fanaticism and its cultural effects on technology), Jason Sweeney ('The Last to See Them Alive', a fragmented work which superimposes a dialogue between a criminologist and a detective on the disappearance of a boy with online sexual desires left half), Gary Zebington ('Fossil', which interacts with the words that users believe they recognize in his animations), Mary Anne Breeze-MEZ ('_data] [h!] [bleeding texts_', six works on electronic writing, language games, iconography and 'jargon' associated with the computer code, chat, email, and play multi-user), Paul Brown ('Where's the Red Wedge? ', three pieces of minimalist art computer based on the concepts of cellular automation, which generate visual patterns are always different), John Tonkin (' meniscus', a series of interactive works that explore ideas related to subjectivity, scientific belief and to the body. They are part of the operation also two important essays by critics McKenzie Wark and Allen Feldman.