Tag Archives: unknown


Tomo Savic-Gecan

Untitled (2011) by Tomo Savic-Gecan

The room shown in the movie is one out of four rooms for the installation ‘untitled’ (2011). Savic-Gecan made this installation for the Witte de With, Rotterdam (NL) exhibition Melanchotopia. The text on the wall explains: “Every change in temperature in the city of Rotterdam causes one of the spaces in Witte de With to open and close.”


Yngve Holen

The Smart Frrridge’ (2010) by Yngve Holen

 


Mark Leckey

Mark Leckey‘s ‘GreenScreenRefrigerator’ (2010)

A black Samsung Bottom Freezer Refrigerator was filmed live in front of an audience at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise. The Fridge stood on a green screen infinity cyc while Leckey coaxed it into revealing its thoughts and actions.

Here is a link to the blog fuckyeahinternetfridge to keep you up to date on the latest amazing usb-controlled fridges.


Aleksandra Domanovic

‘Hottest To Coldest’ (2008) by Aleksandra Domanovic

is a website that continuously arranges a list of all the worlds national capitals according to their current air temperature.

click to visit


Angie Waller

‘The Most Boring Places in the World’ (2009) by Angie Waller

“The Most Boring Places in the World” is a Google Earth tour that pinpoints the location of bloggers, live journal-ers, and chat room commentators. These authors all claim that the city they live in or vacationed in is more boring than any other place they can imagine, at least during the time of their post.

<<launch movie>> (Google Earth plugin required)


Gerard Byrne

Work from “Case Study – Loch Ness (Some possibilities and problems)” (2001-2011) by Gerard Byrne


David Shrigley

‘One day a big wind will come and…’ by David Shrigley


Derek Brunen

‘Plot’ (2007) by Derek Brunen

Brunen bought a plot of land in a cemetary and dug his own grave there as a performance. The video’s original running time is 6 hrs. 15 mins.

‘Plot (From Above)’ 2007

‘Plot (Tombstone)’ (2008)


Ryan Thompson

‘Tree fell site’ (2007-2087), by Department of natural history (Ryan Thompson)

Documentary footage of a tree felling is slowed down to mirror the life span of the tree, 80 years. The video will play once through, thus ending in the year 2087.

‘Tree Fell Site (Stump)’, pigment print (2007)


Unknown

‘Schoften’ (Dutch for ‘Bastards’), found a few years ago in the woods near Oss, NL.