Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 3 days ago
In this video, Georg Bak (Partner, ArtMeta) shows us some highlights or ArtMeta's booth at Zero 10, Art Basel's platform for art of the digital era. The exhibition was titled “Digital Masterpieces: From Code to Canon” and provided a comprehensive survey of the canonical history of digital art spanning 70+ years. Expressed through seven curated chapters, the exhibition traces the evolution of digital art from early experiments with electronic signals and algorithmic graphics to contemporary AI and blockchain-based practices. ArtMeta is a curatorial platform for digital art, contributing to its historical, critical and cultural contextualization through exhibitions, conferences, publications and institutional collaborations.

Artists Include: Ben F. Laposky, Desmond Paul Henry, Herbert W. Franke, Mary Ellen Bute + Ted Nemeth, Aaron Marcus, Alfred Graßl, Charles Csuri, Frieder Nake, Gottfried Honegger, Gottfried Jäger, Hein Gravenhorst, Hiroshi Kawano, Joan Truckenbrod, Kenneth C. Knowlton, Leon Harmon, Manfred Mohr, Michael Noll, Otto Beckmann, Robert Mallary, Vera Molnar, Vladimir Bonačić, Waldemar Cordeiro, Analivia Cordeiro, Barbara Nessim, Chiara Boeri, David Em, Larry Cuba, Mark Wilson, Rebecca Allen, William Latham, Yoichiro Kawaguchi, Constant Dullaart, Cornelia Sollfrank, Eduardo Kac, etoy, Jan Robert Leegte, Jodi, Miltos Manetas, Rafaël Rozendaal, UBERMORGEN, Vuk Ćosić, Casey Reas + Ceasuras, Harm van den Dorpel, Jared S. Tarbell, John Maeda, Kim Asendorf, Larva Labs, Manoloide, Tabor Robak, Anna Ridler, Botto, David Young, Elman Mansimov, Gene Kogan, George Legrady, Harold Cohen, Hervé Graumann, Holly Herndon, Katie Hofstadter, Mario Klingemann, Mat Dryhurst, Memo Akten, Nancy Burson, Sasha Stiles, Tom White, Trevor Paglen, Alejandro Hurtado, DADA, Hackatao, Kenny Schachter, Martin Lukas Ostachowski, Mitchell F. Chan, Rhea Myers, Sarah Friend, terra0, and XCOPY.

Digital Masterpieces: From Code to Canon / ArtMeta at Art Basel 2026 Zero 10. Basel (Switzerland), June 21, 2026.
Transcript
00:17I am George Back. I'm partner of ArtMeta. We are participating at Art Basel's
00:24010, first time here in Basel, with a special exhibition about 70 years of digital art history
00:35in seven chapters that we present here. And we also have an online show that is, you can
00:45see it on our website, artmeta.org. You can go on the catalogue with over 100 artworks
00:52that we have consigned for this art exhibition. And let me guide you through this physical
01:02presentation here in Basel. It's the first chapter, the first chapter of digital art history
01:11with some electronic graphics from the 1950s and early 60s. So you see here on the left
01:19side. That is the first female artist in digital art history. It's Mary Allen Butte who made
01:30these wonderful oscillograms together with her partner Ted Nemeth. They were actually made
01:39on an oscilloscope screen. It's partly analogue, but also with electronic components. And this
01:51artwork was photographed afterwards. And what we see here are basically photographs. It's almost
02:00like screenshots, so to say. Nowadays we would say screenshots. And they are quite beautiful
02:09and refreshing. There are three different artists that you see here. Mary Allen Butte, then Herbert
02:16Franke, the first European artist who experimented with this technology. And on the right side you
02:24see Ben Leposky, who is also an artist who showed his works very early on. I think in 1953 he
02:37had his
02:37first big exhibition showing these, he called them oscilons. And they were shown in more than a hundred venues in
02:47the United States and there was a
02:49one accompanied with a catalogue. And it's one of these very historical exhibitions. Now if we move on to the
02:58next wall. Here we see a selection of plotter drawings and these were made on the first large mainframe computers
03:10that artists had access to. We see an artwork by Manfred
03:17Manfred Moore, Charles Chury, who did the first figurative generative artworks. And the first computer nude on the right side
03:28which was made by Ken Knowlton and Leon Harmon. This has become very famous because it was also on the
03:37cover of the New York Times Magazine and it was shown at MoMA at the time of the creation in
03:451968. And yeah I mean the show goes on with several sculptural works. Also some videos from the 70s and
03:5780s. And the last chapter is of course AI. So we have here two works by Gene Kogan who is
04:13a
04:14guy. He started to experiment with AI as early as 2015. This is actually his AI agent Abraham that he
04:25created in 2021. These are two prints that were prompted on his platform Abraham. He made around 2500 prompts where
04:38he invited also other artists and curators to prompt on his platform. And this is a
04:44historical work. And then we have here a moving image which is by Memo Acton and Katie Hofstetter. They live
04:59in Los Angeles and this particular artwork has been also commissioned for the Biennale two years ago. It was shown
05:08in a church. It's a beautiful AI artwork.
05:12So this is the last chapter of our show. And if you want to know more about our show then
05:17visit our website. You have a lot of texts where you can learn about digital art history.
Comments

Recommended