Nina Pope.Somewhere, by Nina Pope, Karen Karen Any member of a variety of tribal peoples of southern Myanmar (Burma). Constituting the second largest minority in Myanmar, the Karen are not a unitary group in any ethnic sense, as they differ among themselves linguistically, religiously, and economically. J. Guthrie, Pauline Van Mourik Broekman, Paul Welsh Paul Welsh is a British television and radio correspondent and presenter. He was born in England in 1961, but moved frequently because his father was a serving member of the RAF. His family lived in England, Germany, Singapore, Scotland and Cyprus. and Victoria Glare glare (glar) discomfort in the eye and depression of central vision produced when a bright light enters the field of vision, particularly when the eye is adapted to dark. It is direct g. Bernie. Black Dog Publishing, Ltd./71 pp./price unavailable (sb). Somewhere offers a glimpse of the on-line artwork of Pope and Guthrie, a collaborative pair that has been working in digital media since 1994. Examples of on-line discussions between the artists and the viewers/participants of A Hypertext hypertext, technique for organizing computer databases or documents to facilitate the nonsequential retrieval of information. Related pieces of information are connected by preestablished or user-created links that allow a user to follow associative trails across the Journal can be found along the margins of most of the book. Pope and Guthrie retrace the historic exploration of the Western Islands of Scotland by Boswell and Johnson and engage the Internet Internet Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the community by inviting them to respond to their daily uploads. Additional text in this section by Van Mourik Broekman offers an examination of the trip from a historical feminist perspective. Another project, Homespun, is also discussed. In this on-line work the artists returned to their childhood homes to challenge their personal memories of space, family and identity. Video stills of their documentation appear throughout this section and an analysis by Bernie examines some of the issues generated by the critical look at the artists' earliest memories. |
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