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Digital Art
Some say art mirrors life. When computers and other technologies
became indispensable tools in people's lives, some visual artists began using computer
and digital technology instead of pen and paper to create art works; hence, a
new art form widely known as "new media art" comes into being.
The birth of new media art dates back to 30 years ago. It first emerged in the form
of video art, computer music, artistic creations combined with scientific
research, followed by digital art.
On the world art stage, using computers and other media technologies to create
new media art is becoming more and more common and is increasingly
recognized by many people. New media art has become a fixture alongside
traditional paintings and sculptures at large-scale international fine arts
exhibitions. In Europe, America, as well as Japan exhibitions are launched
exclusively for new media art works and museums are established to house them.
Gunalan Nadarajan, director of the Department of Visual Arts at the Lasalle
Sia College of the Arts, said digital art refers to the form and process of
creating art by using new developments in computer technology, especially from
researching information, communications, imaging and bioscience.
To date, art forms classified as digital art include digital images
(including digital paintings, digital photography and digital video), computer
motion pictures and holographic works, CD-ROM art, virtual environments
(computer games), web art (hypertext and telerobotic technology), human-machine
interfaces (cyborg technologies), biology-related art that makes use of
biological engineering, computer music and the art of sound waves and mixed art
combined with other art forms like drama, dance and installations.
From electronic art to new media, to digital art, scholars have used various
names in their attempt to reflect the constantly emerging new art forms.
However, since these art forms remained in the fledgling stage, their titles
were usually characterized by unclear confines and repetition.
Since digital art is a novel phenomenon, artists tend to attach too much attention
to form instead of content. Axel Wirths, a German designer of new media
art exhibitions, emphasized that "New media art is not about technology but
about content. Technology seems to bring more expectations to people, and makes you
expect many changes, but in fact only content can bring real changes. Only if
staff in the field of art creation learned about the developmental history of
new media art could they avoid repeating the works of their
predecessors."
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