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1. ![]() and substantiates by his own frequent radio and TV appearances. Umberto Eco devoted the conclusion of his book about «the open artwork»[8] to live broadcast television experience, where he saw a structural relationship with the non-predetermined [more] ![]() |
2. ![]() into an art context in order to be noticed in the first place. As delineated by Umberto Eco in his influential book «The Open Work,» published in 1962, live broadcasts harbored the potential for real-time participation. («Exposition of [more] ![]() |
3. ![]() [42] The history of interaction began before the computer era, cf. Söke Dinkla, Pioniere Interaktiver Kunst von 1970 bis heute, Ostfildern, 1997. Interaction is already the theme and a significant aspect of works by John Cage and Umberto Eco's «Opera Aperta»; cf. the text «Interaction, Participation, Networking.» [more] ![]() |
4. ![]() impressive accounts of these tensioned- filled circumstances and embodiments of productive dysfunctionality. From the «open artwork» (Umberto Eco) and the musical practices of an artist like John Cage, a link leads to the first processual video [more] ![]() |