Home
Rafaël Rozendaal: Everything, Always, Everywhere
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Rafaël Rozendaal: Everything, Always, Everywhere
Current price: $29.50


Barnes and Noble
Rafaël Rozendaal: Everything, Always, Everywhere
Current price: $29.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
One of the first artists to sell websites as art objects, New York–based Dutch-Brazilian artist Rafaël Rozendaal (born 1980) has created a body of work spanning mediums from the digital to the physical.
But the digital is the starting point for all of Rozendaal’s art.
Everything, Always, Everywhere
reflects on the change that his work has undergone in recent years, looking at both his own evolution as an artist and the technological progress that has influenced digital art in general. Richly illustrated, the book consists of several related parts. Three essays, by curator and media scholar Christiane Paul, art historian Margriet Schavemaker and author Kodama Kanazawa, focus on net and digital art and Rozendaal’s connections to Japan and Asia. Marvin Jordan conducts a lengthy interview with the artist. As a complement to the book, the smartphone app From Looking to Hearing translates the visual work into an audio work.
But the digital is the starting point for all of Rozendaal’s art.
Everything, Always, Everywhere
reflects on the change that his work has undergone in recent years, looking at both his own evolution as an artist and the technological progress that has influenced digital art in general. Richly illustrated, the book consists of several related parts. Three essays, by curator and media scholar Christiane Paul, art historian Margriet Schavemaker and author Kodama Kanazawa, focus on net and digital art and Rozendaal’s connections to Japan and Asia. Marvin Jordan conducts a lengthy interview with the artist. As a complement to the book, the smartphone app From Looking to Hearing translates the visual work into an audio work.