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 From James Faure Walker:

UNIVERSITY OF THE ARTS LONDON CAMBERWELL

TALK
Art of the Digital Age: Past and Future

Tuesday 14 November 2006 at 6.30pm

Bruce Wands will talk about his new book Art of the Digital Age,
followed  by a discussion with panellists William Latham, Ilze
Black, chaired by James Faure Walker.

Date: Tuesday 14 November 6.30pm

Venue: Lecture Hall, Wilson Road, Camberwell College of Arts

Tickets: £5 / £3.50 (concessions), tickets from
http://www.cochranetheatre.co.uk/ or call 020 7269 1606

The talk is FREE for Camberwell's students and staff on a first
come/first served basis; free tickets can't be reserved and need
to be collected from the Box Office desk from half an hour before
the event.

Bruce Wands is an artist, writer, and musician. His new book, Art
of the Digital Age, is published by Thames & Hudson. Time Out New
York named Bruce as one of the ‘99 People to Watch in 1999’. He
is the Chair of the MFA Computer Art Department and the Director
of Computer Education at the School of Visual Arts in New York.
He is the Director of the New York Digital Salon, which
celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2003. He is the author of
Digital Creativity, published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. in 2002.

Ilze Black is an artist and curator, currently Head of new Media
Art Development at Watermans Art Centre. She is co-founder of
AmbientTV.net, and Director of TAKE2030 Brave New Media Society,
launching RichAir2030 at the 2003 Venice Biennale. Through the
Latvia Art Bureau OPEN, she has staged events in the streets of
Riga‚ centred on the network society.

William Latham was the leading computer artist in the UK in the
1980`s, with his ‘Mutation’ virtual sculptures. He co-authored
the book Evolutionary Art and Computers in 1992. In the 1990`s he
produced the hit game, the THING. In 2005 he became Professor of
Creative Technology at Leeds Metropolitan University, and is also
visiting Senior Research Fellow at Goldsmiths College.

James Faure Walker is Research Fellow in SCIRIA at Camberwell
College. He is a painter and digital artist. In 1998 he won the
‘Golden Plotter’ at Computerkunst, Gladbeck, Germany. His book,
Painting the Digital River: How an Artist Learned to Love the
Computer, was published in the USA this year.

This event is supported by MA Digital Arts and SCIRIA (Sensory
Computer Interface Research & Innovation for the Arts) at
Camberwell College of Arts.

www.camberwell.arts.ac.uk