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Digital America

Tag: Collaboration

Bio image of Peter Christenson and Lester Black
Q + A

Peter Christenson and Lester Black | Q+A

Digital America interviewed Peter Christenson and Lester Black in November 2021 about their piece An Incomplete Diary of Covid Complaints (2021), collaborative work, and...

by Meghan Rosatelli November 14, 2021November 16, 2021
Feature image for An Incomplete Diary of Covid Complaints
Features

An Incomplete Diary of Covid Complaints | Peter Christenson, Lester Black & Others

Artists Peter Christenson and Lester Black brought together local artists, community members, and students to create An Incomplete Diary of Covid Complaints (2021)—a multimedia...

by Meghan Rosatelli November 1, 2021November 16, 2021
Features Process Features

Designing Cities of the Future

Today’s cities are becoming increasingly dense as people choose to live more urban lives, which affects sustainability efforts put in place to protect the...

by Meghan Rosatelli December 17, 2013September 7, 2020
Features

The Demise of net.art: A Look At Artifacts Past | Kenta Murakami

The absorption of radical art movements by the mainstream has become a cliché of the avant-garde. “Subversion to assimilation to absorption”: a cycle net.artist...

by Meghan Rosatelli October 21, 2013September 14, 2020
Features Process Features

Virtual Interworlds

What does it mean for something to be virtual? And what does it mean for something to be a world? These are the questions...

by Meghan Rosatelli January 7, 2013March 19, 2018

Editor's Note:

Welcome to the 20th anniversary issue of Digital America. Digital America is both a class and an arts journal in the Art and Art History Department at the University of Richmond. For each semester for the past ten years, students have come together to curate, edit, and publish compelling and innovative works of art in the digital space. The journal has matured over the years, yet earlier works resurfaced here maintain their relevance. In addition to resurfaced works, we’ve spent the fall 2022 semester reconnecting with artists and students from previous issues. We feel honored that these artists and former students have given us their time and insights into new work. We thank everyone we’ve ever published, and the dozens of students who’ve taken the course, for believing in accessible digital art for all. You’re the best. 

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Digital America 2022
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