Here you can download free, printable photos of current Ars Electronica activities. Please cite the image credits (artwork name, artist and photographer) and only use the photos if your article is related to Ars Electronica. Photos from previous years can be found in our image archive or on our Flickr account.

_CS_6930.jpg Charlotte Triebus: Precious Camouflage: Artistic Research for the Creation of a Dance Piece with Humans and AIThumbnailsArtist Perspective – Wendi Yan, Alona Rodeh, Alessandro Bavari & Adrian Haim (Total Refusal)Charlotte Triebus: Precious Camouflage: Artistic Research for the Creation of a Dance Piece with Humans and AIThumbnailsArtist Perspective – Wendi Yan, Alona Rodeh, Alessandro Bavari & Adrian Haim (Total Refusal)Charlotte Triebus: Precious Camouflage: Artistic Research for the Creation of a Dance Piece with Humans and AIThumbnailsArtist Perspective – Wendi Yan, Alona Rodeh, Alessandro Bavari & Adrian Haim (Total Refusal)Charlotte Triebus: Precious Camouflage: Artistic Research for the Creation of a Dance Piece with Humans and AIThumbnailsArtist Perspective – Wendi Yan, Alona Rodeh, Alessandro Bavari & Adrian Haim (Total Refusal)

Selina Behrens, Simone Feldbacher & Sebastian Grundherr: Divine Machinery: Making the Transhuman Experience Tangible

Divine Machinery critically approaches the relationship between humans and generative technologies. Drawing on the concepts of Mysterium Tremendum and Fascinosum from theology, which describe awe and fear toward the divine, we apply these ideas to technology.

Photo showing (left to right): Selina Behrens, Sebastian Grundherr, Simone Feldbacher

Photo: Christoph Schaufler