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SEARCH RESULTS FOR TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION IN AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS ARCHIVE : 126 ITEMS FOUND

Art in the Age of the Internet

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Thursday, February 1, 2018
Summary: 

Art in the Age of the Internet, 1989 to Today traces the relationship between internet culture and artistic practice through the work of contemporary artists such as Ed Atkins, Camille Henrot, and Anicka Yi, and looks back to pre-internet pioneers including Nam June Paik.

More Than A feeling: Ten Design Practices to Deliver Business Value

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Friday, December 1, 2017
Summary: 

This report explores the underlying design practices that allow some firms to succeed above others across multiple industries. Aiming to uncover the connections between business value and design, the report identifies ten design actions across three themes that appear to correlate with improved performance. Amazon Prime, Apple, Netflix, Tesla are among the companies that get design right.

Are Artists the New Interpreters of Scientific Innovation?

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Summary: 

Artist in residence at industrial and government organizations has become secondary to the more well know artist in resident at "luxury-summer-camp" wgere they remove themselves from the noise and duties of day to day land concentrate on their own creative growth. This artilce discusses the resurgence of interest in the idea of inviting artists to observe, learn and work within mainstream government agencies and institutions, among entrepreneurs and scientists as well as among the artists themselves.

Design in Tech Report 2017

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Summary: 

Report identifies and defines computational design as a key driver in the growth of tech businesses. Computational designers are those who deal mostly in code and build constantly evolving products that impact millions of people’s lives.

Infographic: How Has Technology Changed the Way We Learn and Teach Music?

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Summary: 

Music learning games, access to sheet music, online lessons and communities allow for the global exchange of information, opening up a world of online music education. These new education platforms not only give us access to more information, but they also help to lift barriers common to traditional music lessons.

The Rise: Creativity, the Gift of Failure, and the Search for Mastery

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Summary: 

"The path to a great achievement—whether it is a technological innovation or a masterwork of art—is almost never direct. On the contrary, creative breakthroughs often come after wrenching failures. That idea animates The Rise: Creativity, the Gift of Failure, and the Search for Mastery, a book by Sarah Lewis, an art curator who is completing her PhD at Yale. Based on 150 interviews with artists and explorers as well as scientists and entrepreneurs, the book is neither a self-help manual nor a bundle of case studies. It’s a meditation on accomplishments that come from...

Digital Natives: An Evolutionary Look at Tech in the Classroom – Infographic

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Thursday, January 1, 2015
Summary: 

This infographic from the folks at Sungard details the evolution of digital technology in the classroom. It maps out what the tech classroom looked like in 2005, looks like now, and should look like in 2025.

Like, Link, Share: How Cultural Institutions are Embracing Digital Technology

Date of Publication (formatted): 
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Summary: 

How are cultural institutions using digital technologies to further their missions? What can we learn from talking to innovators doing this work? The Wyncote Foundation commissioned this report to help answer these questions.

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