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Capturing over twenty years of thinking and writing about art, media, and technology, "Before and After the 1-Bomb is a techno-cultural history of a time when electronic, digital media flooded our homes, workplaces, and landscapes. Author Tom Sherman's series of reflections express both a love for and struggle with the new technologies and the cultural changes they have spawned. His narrative is a personal history that looks at the past, present, and future with an artist's voice and a naturalist's eyes. As Sherman opens his text, "When one is observing and describing the world, one should…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Capturing over twenty years of thinking and writing about art, media, and technology, "Before and After the 1-Bomb is a techno-cultural history of a time when electronic, digital media flooded our homes, workplaces, and landscapes. Author Tom Sherman's series of reflections express both a love for and struggle with the new technologies and the cultural changes they have spawned. His narrative is a personal history that looks at the past, present, and future with an artist's voice and a naturalist's eyes. As Sherman opens his text, "When one is observing and describing the world, one should simply tell it like it is. Describe the good and the bad and leave nothing out because it is disappointing or frightening or unlikely. In these texts I've tried to honour that ideal."
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Autorenporträt
Tom Sherman is a media artist, writer and broadcaster. He knows the media environment from several perspectives, having worked in mainstream radio and television, but also having produced groundbreaking art with video gear, industrial robots, surveillance systems and telecommunications networks. He founded the Media Arts Section of the Canada Council for the Arts, co-founded Fuse magazine, and represented Canada at the Venice Biennale. Sherman performs and records with the group Nerve Theory. In 2010, he was awarded the Governor General Award in Visual and Media Arts. He currently teaches transmedia, art and design at Syracuse University in New York, but considers Nova Scotia's South Shore his home.