EDITOR'S NOTE:

Art Digital Magazine (AD MAG) is on a long-term hiatus. AD MAG was published from 2010 to 2016, and during that time it amassed the largest collection of feature length interviews and articles with digital artist and art administrators in the world. In time, AD MAG will return, but for now the domain redirects to Digital Art News (DAN).

Monday, July 24, 2017

Neon Saltwanter presents UNVIRTUAL at Glass Box Gallery

This month Abby Dougherty, aka Neon Saltwater, takes over the three rooms of Glass Box Gallery, transforming the space to resemble the phantasmagorical realms she typically renders and displays in digital 3D.  Read more.

Monday, July 17, 2017

Art Studio Helps Adults With Disabilities Turn Their Passion Into A Career

Teenagers often have to wait years to do the things they want to do — drive, drink, vote. But for Mara Clawson, it was something different.

As a teen, Clawson loved making art — specifically drawing with pastels.  Read more.

Sunday, July 16, 2017

A ‘NEUROGRAPHER’ PUTS THE ART IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

CLAUDE MONET USED brushes, Jackson Pollock liked a trowel, and Cartier-Bresson toted a Leica. Mario Klingemann makes art using artificial neural networks.

In the past few years this kind of software—loosely inspired by ideas from...read more.

Friday, July 14, 2017

Christiane Paul announces new Artport exhibition at the Whitney Museum

Screenshot from Addie Wagenknecht's “Believe me,” commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art

The Whitney Museum of American Art announces a new exhibition at Artport, the museum’s “portal to Internet art and an online gallery space for commissions of net art and new media art.”    Curated by Christian Paul, an associate professor and the associate dean at the School of Media Studies, The New School, the new Artport exhibit features a striking new work by Addie Wagenknecht, entitled “Believe me,” which plays off the benign 21st century phenomena of the distorted visuals of a cracked cell phone screen.  Also exhibiting is a multiple image work by Lorna Mills, entitled “Caughtinmoment, which superimposes asymmetrical, hard edged skyscapes of New York City on the museum’s website.”  Visit Artport here.

Screenshot from Lorna Milla's “Caughtinmoment,” commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art
Focusing exclusively on American art of the 20th and 21st centuries, the Whitney was formerly located in in an iconic building by Marcel Breuer, and recently relocated to a considerably larger building by renowned architect, Renzo Piano.  Visit Artport here.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Arc to use grant for art labs

Arc of Seneca Cayuga was recently awarded a grant of $4,380 from the Cayuga Community Fund of the Central New York Foundation.

The funds will be used to purchase and install...read more.