Like a slow brewing revolt against the establishment (a trend we are seeing socially and politically around the world), the exponential advances in technology development are beginning to evoke a ...
Laughter has its place but it can be awkward when it’s out of place. There is, for instance, something decidedly awkward when an audience fails to laugh at the punchline of a joke. Almost as awkward ...
“Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age,” an exhibition gathering 100 works that illustrate how artistic practices shifted with the emergence of computer technology beginning in the 1950s, opens at the ...
New York, N.Y.: Saul Fuerstein of New York uses a microscope to clean and restore the painting "Boy in Blue Jacket" by Modigliani at the Guggenheim Foundation Museum in Manhattan on March 31, 1954.
As a university professor for more than 30 years, I’ve often wondered why the general areas of technology and arts have been seen as so separate on campus. My experience is that there is great value ...
Fueling creativity, innovation, and ingenuity. Harnessing diverse ways of thinking, exploring, and making. Advancing knowledge and addressing complex problems. The intersection of Technology, the Arts ...
Simun’s dreams encompass everything from cheese made from human milk to technology that captures the scent of endangered flowers to bees and their conspicuous absence. The artist, who works in video, ...
RIT alumna Christine Ramage is grateful that higher education provided her with strong technical fundamentals that helped her launch a highly successful career. As director of photography for ...
The Knight Foundation, focused on journalism and the arts, is opening a call-for-ideas from creatives and organizations using immersive technology to bring art to their audiences. Selected projects ...
Learn the principles of digital technology and discover ways to innovate traditional art. Develop a creative style with a unique aesthetic and technique. Our faculty are active members of the tech and ...
In October of last year, Mike Winkelmann, a digital artist who goes by the name Beeple, noticed increasing talk in his online circles about a technology called “non-fungible tokens,” or N.F.T.s.
Art scholar Michio Hayashi theorized that the popular perception of “Japaneseness” in the West was cemented in the 1980s by triangulating “kitsch hybridity,” “primordial nature,” and “technological ...