Difference between revisions of "Netherlands"

From Monoskop
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 20: Line 20:
 
; Cities
 
; Cities
 
[[Almere]], [[Amersfoort]], [[Amsterdam]], [[Arnhem]], [[Deventer]], [[Eindhoven]], [[Enschede]], [[Groningen]], [[The Hague]], [[Leeuwarden]], [[Leiden]], [[Maastricht]], [[Nijmegen]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Utrecht]], [[Wageningen]].
 
[[Almere]], [[Amersfoort]], [[Amsterdam]], [[Arnhem]], [[Deventer]], [[Eindhoven]], [[Enschede]], [[Groningen]], [[The Hague]], [[Leeuwarden]], [[Leiden]], [[Maastricht]], [[Nijmegen]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Utrecht]], [[Wageningen]].
 +
 +
; Events
 +
* http://www.v2.nl/lab/blog/50-Years-of-Dutch-Media-Art-at-STRP
  
 
; Literature
 
; Literature

Revision as of 00:21, 30 May 2012

Experimental film

  • Anna Abrahams, Mariska Graveland, Erwin van 't Hart, Peter van Hoof, MM2. Experimental film in the Netherlands since 1960. Filmbank / De Balie, 2004. [1]
  • Anna Abrahams, Claartje Opdam, Mariska Graveland, film3 [‘kju:bIk fIlm]. Amsterdam University Press, 2010. [2]

Computer art

  • Darko Fritz, "Beginning of computer-generated art in the Netherlands", paper presented at Rewire conference, 2011. [3]

Video art

  • Sebastian Lopez. A Short History of Dutch Video Art/ Una Breve Historia del Video Arte en Holanda. Amsterdam: Gate Foundation, 2005. ISBN: 90-5973-031-3

Electroacoustic and electronic music

New media art, Media culture

Cities

Almere, Amersfoort, Amsterdam, Arnhem, Deventer, Eindhoven, Enschede, Groningen, The Hague, Leeuwarden, Leiden, Maastricht, Nijmegen, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Wageningen.

Events
Literature
Resources
  • Media Art Platform (MAP) is a social networking website for media art professionals and enthusiasts, initiative of the Netherlands Media Art Institute. [10]
  • The Dutch Thing. A directory service for artists and their organisations. The dutch Thing maps content and context into simple lists and messages. The original site was launched in 1996.