»Photomat«, 2003 by Oz Malul.
robotlab, “The Bible Scribe”, 2007.
»The Art of Futility«, 2007 (Whiteboard, motorized drawing and Erasing Machines) by Aaron Raymer.
»Space Junk Spotting« 2006, is a project composed of mechanical and programming equipment linked to a database at a U.S. government-owned space observatory; this database contains the fullest possible data on the extent of the pollution and presents remarkable scientific methods for determining the position of space junk. In this way, the wider Internet public is offered a folder of information about space debris, which is strewn across the popular three-dimensional interface Google Earth. The tactical potential of this catalogue is the possibility it provides for finding a creative and constructive solution to the problem of reusing material whose position in usable orbits is already determined, without the enormous initial costs that arise whenever rockets are shot into space. By Saso Sedlacek.
»Beggar 2.0« another project by Saso Sedlacek is a robot for the materially deprived in Tokyo. It is made of old electronics and computer spare parts. The original 1.0 was tested in Slovenian shopping malls where it is forbidden to beg, but no such rule was made for robots. The new upgrade version of Beggar robot made at IAMAS institute in Japan was tested in the beginning of July 2006 on Tokyo streets where begging isn’t really a frequent phenomena and where interface communication is ubiquitous.Video.
»Three Ball Total Equilibrium Tank« by Jeff Koonst and »Methamphetamine« by Damien Horst from the »Saetchi Collection« by Nika Oblak and Primoz Novak.
»Smartist« is a independent mobile robot that replaces an artist. It lives in the exhibition area where it moves freely and and occasionally writes the signatures of Nika Oblak and Primoz Novak on the gallery floor.
»Robotic Process-Model«, »Hypnosis Cession«, »Urban Fragment« and other videos by François Roche.
A quadruped robot dances to an electro-environmental soundtrack performed live by a group of singing insects in a big glass box. Small work for robots and insects by hostprods .
Painting Manufacture Unit by Roxy Paine. A spray nozzle mounted on a large moving arm travels in front of a canvas, spraying acrylic paint as it makes its pass. After a programmed amount of inactivity, which allows the paint to dry, the arm gets to work again and makes another pass.
Auto Sculpture Maker creates an endless series of amorphous sculptural blobs.
Drawing Machine floods paint into a mixing chamber and dispenses it via a spray nozzle that travels a pre-programmed course over the paper. After making its pass and releasing its paint load, the machine rests, allowing the paint to dry-before another pass is made. All three machines by Roxy Paine.
“One Minute” by Meridith Pingree. Participants generate portraits of their physical personality when they wear a strap-on video pinhole camera headband for one minute. The movement of the camera is translated into a three-dimensional line drawing and output as an object by a 3-D printer.