DigitalNetArt
Up one levelC3 Center for Culture and Communication
The aims of the C³: Center for Culture & Communication Foundation are the cultural application and creative employment of new scientific and technological discoveries, the research, development and support of innovative artistic potentials, and the initiation and realisation of art, science, communications, educational and cultural programmes.
DIAN - Digital Interactive Artists Network
DIAN is a collection of digital art curated by Gunilla Leander and Gerhard Mantz.
Furtherfield
Furtherfield is an online platform for the creation, promotion, criticism and archiving of adventurous digital/net art work for public viewing, experience and interaction. Furtherfield creates imaginative strategies that actively communicate ideas and issues in a range of digital & terrestrial media contexts; featuring works online and organising global, contributory projects, simultaneously on the Internet, the streets and public venues. Furtherfield focuses on network related projects that explore new social contexts that transcend the digital, or offer a subjective voice that communicates beyond the medium. Furtherfield collaborates with artists, programmers, writers, activists, musicians and thinkers who explore beyond traditional remits. Furtherfield was founded in 1997 by artists Marc Garrett and Ruth Catlow and is a London based, non-profit organisation.
Intercommunication Center Tokyo
NTT InterCommunication Center [ICC] is an innovative cultural facility in Tokyo Opera City Tower in Nishi-Shinjuku, Tokyo. ICC wishes to encourage the dialogue between technology and the arts with a core theme of "communication," thereby building an affluent society for the future. Through such dialogue, it also aims to become a network that links artists and scientists worldwide, as well as a center for information exchange. Since its opening, ICC has been actively introducing media art works which employ the newest electronic technologies such as virtual reality and interactive technology. Special exhibitions which break with conventional frameworks and transcend genres have also been held. However, ICC's activities are not limited to these exhibitions. Through various programs such as workshops, performances, symposiums, NewSchool, and publishing, ICC will continue to introduce new forms of expression and experimental attempts which are unbridled from conventional frameworks, and explore further possibilities of communication.
NetArt Initiative
ated to invoking vigorous discussions among students, to providing a channel for exchange, as well as a showcase for work.
Public Netbase t0 Institute for New Culture Technologies
Public Netbase is a net culture institution. It was established in 1994 and offers the arts and culture scene a platform for the self-determined use of new media.
RunMe Digital Art Repository
Runme.org is a software art repository, launched in January 2003. It is an open, moderated database to which people are welcome to submit projects they consider to be interesting examples of software art. Software art is an intersection of two almost non-overlapping realms: software and art. It has a different meaning and aura in each. Software art gets its lifeblood and its techniques from living software culture and represents approaches and strategies similar to those used in the art world. Software culture lives on the Internet and is often presented through special sites called software repositories. Art is traditionally presented in festivals and exhibitions. Software art on the one hand brings software culture into the art field, but on the other hand it extends art beyond institutions. The aim of Runme.org is to create an exchange interface for artists and programmers which will work towards a contextualization of this new form of cultural activity. Runme.org welcomes projects regardless of the date and context of their creation. The repository is happy to host different kinds of projects - ranging from found, anonymous software art to famous projects by established artists and programmers.
SFMOMA E.SPACE
E.space was inaugurated in the spring of 2000 with works from the Museum's permanent collection of Web sites, selected by Aaron Betsky, the former curator of architecture, design, and digital projects. You can access these original online projects through the e.space archive. The redesign of e.space was prompted by the need to accommodate a wider range of projects. Since the launch of e.space, the Museum has been commissioning new Web projects, including five that were part of the exhibition 010101: Art in Technological Times. It has also participated in the development of Crossfade: Sound Travels on the Web, a curated space devoted to the use of the Internet by sound artists, reflecting upon the notion of the Net as a performing space and instrument. Artists' Projects offers direct access to commissioned artworks, permanent collection Web objects, and featured sites. Commissioned Web projects explore the new forms of storytelling in a space delineated by the personal computer screen, as well as the hypermedia structure. They may also explore the relationship between real and virtual space, or exist on a multitude of platforms, exploring such notions as "expanded cinema." Curatorial Experiments is a collection of past and ongoing media essays and other forms of curatorial projects that investigate new models for the transposing of the notion of an online exhibition.
Whitney ARTPORT
The Whitney Museum of American Art Portal to Net Art. Features Gate pages showcasing major digital artists; commissioned projects; online exhibitions; and a list of resources.



