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Related Topics: Art >> Mixed-Media
Windows and Mirrors,9780262025454
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Windows and Mirrors


Author(s): Jay David Bolter and Diane Gromala
ISBN10:  0262025450
ISBN13:  9780262025454
Format:  Hardcover
Pub. Date:  11/1/2003
Publisher(s): Mit Pr

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SummaryTable of Contents
In Windows and Mirrors: Interaction Design, Digital Art, and the Myth of Transparency, Jay David Bolter and Diane Gromala argue that, contrary to Donald Norman's famous dictum, we do not always want our computers to be invisible "information appliances." They say that a computer does not feel like a toaster or a vacuum cleaner; it feels like a medium that is now taking its place beside other media like printing, film, radio, and television. The computer as medium creates new forms and genres for artists and designers; Bolter and Gromala want to show what digital art has to offer to Web designers, education technologists, graphic artists, interface designers, HCI experts, and, for that matter, anyone interested in the cultural implications of the digital revolution.

In the early 1990s, the World Wide Web began to shift from purely verbal representation to an experience for the user in which form and content were thoroughly integrated. Designers brought their skills and sensibilities to the Web, as well as a belief that a message was communicated through interplay of words and images. Bolter and Gromala argue that invisibility or transparency is only half the story; the goal of digital design is to establish a rhythm between transparency—made possible by mastery of techniques—and reflection—as the medium itself helps us understand our experience of it.

The book examines works of digital art from the Art Gallery at SIGGRAPH. These works, and their inclusion in an important computer conference, show that digital art is relevant to technologists. In fact, digital art can be considered the purest form of experimental design; the examples in this book show that design need not deliver information and then erase itself from our consciousness but can engage us in an interactive experience of form and content.

The experience of digital art and how it is relevant to information technology.
Series Foreword vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 2(6)
1 TEXT RAIN The Digital Experience 8(22)
2 Wooden Mirror: The Myth of Transparency 30(28)
3 Nosce Te Ipsum: Seeing Yourself in the Digital Mirror 58(18)
4 Magic Book: The New and the Old in New Media 76(18)
5 Fakeshop: The Diversity of New Media 94(20)
6 T-Garden: The Materiality of New Media 114(316)
7 Terminal Time: Design in Context 430
8 The Art Gallery of SIGGRAPH 2000 142(308)
9 Before and After SIGGRAPH 2000 450(12)
Colophon: Excretia and Reading as a Reflective Experience 462
Appendix 170(4)
References 174(3)
Index 177

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