spelling |
oapen-20.500.12657-520892022-01-25T10:57:22Z Van Gogh TV's »Piazza Virtuale« Baumgärtel, Tilman Weinert, Julian Media Art Social Media Van Gogh TV Piazza Virtuale Documenta Media Art Cultural History Media History Media Aesthetics Media Studies bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JF Society & culture: general::JFD Media studies bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AF Art forms::AFK Non-graphic art forms::AFKV Electronic, holographic & video art Piazza virtuale by the group of artists known as Van Gogh TV was not only the biggest art project ever to appear on television, but from a contemporary point of view the project was also a forerunner of today's social media. The ground-breaking event that took place during the 100 days of documenta IX in 1992 was an early experiment with entirely user-created content. This is the first book-length study of this largely forgotten experiment: It documents the radicality of Piazza virtuale's approach, the novel programme ideas and the technical innovations. It also allows, via QR codes, direct access to videos from the show, which until now have been inaccessible. 2021-12-17T17:43:07Z 2021-12-17T17:43:07Z 2021 book ONIX_20211217_9783839460665_15 9783839460665 9783837660661 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/52089 eng Edition Medienwissenschaft application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International 9783839460665.pdf transcript Verlag transcript Verlag 10.14361/9783839460665 10.14361/9783839460665 b30a6210-768f-42e6-bb84-0e6306590b5c 9783839460665 9783837660661 transcript Verlag 96 234 Bielefeld open access
|
description |
Piazza virtuale by the group of artists known as Van Gogh TV was not only the biggest art project ever to appear on television, but from a contemporary point of view the project was also a forerunner of today's social media. The ground-breaking event that took place during the 100 days of documenta IX in 1992 was an early experiment with entirely user-created content. This is the first book-length study of this largely forgotten experiment: It documents the radicality of Piazza virtuale's approach, the novel programme ideas and the technical innovations. It also allows, via QR codes, direct access to videos from the show, which until now have been inaccessible.
|