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Expanded Media - Coggle Diagram
Expanded Media
Intervention Art
"The term art intervention applies to art designed specifically to interact with an existing structure or situation, be it another artwork, the audience, an institution or in the public domain" (Tate Modern, London)
Land Art
A.K.A. Earth Art, Environmental Art
Emerged in 1960s and 1970s
Works are often far from civilization and population centers
Works, usually exclusively, with materials that come directly from the earth
Often fairly inaccessible, photo documentation is often displayed in galleries
Bunjil, a geoglyph at the You Yangs, Lara, Australia, by Andrew Rogers.
Meteorite by Milton Becerra in Ibirapuera Park, XVIII Biennial of São Paulo, Brazil (1985).
Stuart Brisley
Beneath Dignity (1977)
Tate
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Digital Art
"Digital art is a term used to describe art that is made or presented using digital technology"
(Tate Modern, London)
Sound Art
An artistic form where sound is featured as the primary material or medium
According to Brandon LaBelle, sound art as a practice "harnesses, describes, analyzes, performs, and interrogates the condition of sound and the process by which it operates."
Cobar Sound Chapel
A site-specific permanent sound installation. The chapel was created in 2000 by the composer and Sound Artist Georges Lentz in collaboration with architect Glenn Murcutt. Home to Lentz's digital 24-hour surround-sound "String Quartet(s)" (2000–2022), a composition recorded in the duration of many years by Sydney's string quartet, "The Noise"

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Ryota Matsumoto-Japanese interdisciplinary artist widely known as one of the progenitors of the postdigital art movement.
Integrates traditional ( graphite, ink, acrylic) and digital media (3D scanning, algorithmic processing, data transcoding) in his work.
Recursive Topography of Uncertainty
Rapid Gaze Polynomials Embedded in Infinite Variables
Performance Art
Artworks that are created through actions performed by the artist or other participants, which may be live or recorded, spontaneous or scripted (Tate Modern, London)

Marina Abramovic
Serbian performance and conceptual artist. Known as the "grandmother of performance art", Abramovic became known for her work that explored body art, endurance art and shock art.
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Balkan Baroque (1997)
Yoko Ono is a Japanese multi--media artist, songwriter, singer. Known for her peace activist and feminist, Ono is also known for her various performance pieces throughout her lifetime
Bed-In (1969)
Cut Piece (1964)
Activist Art
"A term used to describe art that is grounded in the act of ‘doing’ and addresses political or social issues" (Tate Modern, London)

Faith Ringgold
African-American artist that works with painting, performance art, mixed media. She is most known, however, for her handmade narrative quilts. These quilts document Black history and call for racial equality
Woman on a Bridge #1 of 5: Tar Beach (1988)

Slave Story Rape Quilt (1985)

Keith Haring
American artist who emerged in the 1980s, famous for his animations and grafitti with large markers. His work was public, commonly found in New York Subway stations early on. This was deliberate as his intention was to ensure his art was accessible to everyone, not just the "elite". Much of his art was focused on celebrating queerness. Haring was diagnosed with AIDS in 1988. As a gay man in the height of the AIDS epidemic, he felt duty-bound to advocate for the treatment of patients living with HIV and AIDS, as well as breaking down the stigma that surrounded those living with those diagnoses.
Safe Sex (1988)
Ignorance=Fear (1989)