Search results
Definition. Post-Internet is a loosely-defined term that was coined by artist/curator Marisa Olson in an attempt to describe her practice. It emerged from mid-2000s discussions about Internet art by Gene McHugh (author of a blog titled "Post-Internet"), and Artie Vierkant (artist, and creator of Image Object sculpture series).
Mar 18, 2014 · Artie Vierkant's 2010 essay "The Image Object Post-Internet" sparked much of the recent conversation surrounding art after the Internet. In it, Vierkant, an artist himself, surveys the way we engage with images in the post-Internet era, when they can be shared, reproduced, altered, and distributed more easily than ever before in human history.
Post-Internet is a loose descriptor for works of art that are derived from the Internet as well as the internet's effects on aesthetics, culture and society. It is a broad term with many associations and has been heavily criticized.
Jun 29, 2021 · In Post-Internet Art and Pre-Internet Art Education, Sweeny starts by first describing the early history of the Internet, using historical and familiar concepts from Bush , Castells , and Manovich , and argues that forms of interaction and engagement facilitated by this history have led to a post-internet condition. By inquiring into the ...
- Gila Kolb, Juuso Tervo, Kevin Tavin
- 2021
The history of the Internet has its origin in the efforts of scientists and engineers to build and interconnect computer networks. The Internet Protocol Suite , the set of rules used to communicate between networks and devices on the Internet, arose from research and development in the United States and involved international collaboration ...
Post-Internet refers to a current trend in art and criticism concerned with the impact of the Internet on art and culture. Taking cues from the understanding of Postmodernism as a reaction to or rejection of Modernism, post-Internet does not imply a time “after” the Internet but rather a time “about” the Internet.
The term “post-internet” refers not to a time “after” the internet, but rather to an internet state of mind, to think in the fashion of the network. In...