
By recording events from start to finish in a single frame, Gary Nakamoto captures the time it takes to live them.

Disguised as disturbed adolescent "seepy1," Carrie Paterson seizes power the only way it can be seized: through submersion. 

Austrian composer Thom Poe interprets the voice and rhythm of fifteen Viennese escalators to create a haunting concert of everyday sounds.


Choreographer Taisha Paggett copes with overstimulation through the body, while collaborator and video artist Ashley Hunt binges on information.
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With tiaras of bamboo, twigs and grains, Cirilo Domine reassigns the value of labels, materials and human labor. 


David Krantz measures the tension between commuters as they vie for personal space in the traffic of public passages. 
David Khang "performs" language that is at once written, spoken and calligraphic, creating a communication through the visceral and the grotesque. 
Ashley Hunt's "Salt" explores the vestiges of colonialism embedded in the modern city.  
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An eleven-foot Pinocchio and an unlucky jelly doughnut find their way into a curious menagerie of sculpture and video by visual artist Atsushi Tameda. 

Young Chung entreats us to consider how we look at the people, objects and passages we encounter when we fly. 


Music therapist by day and sound artist by night, Brendan Ormsby (aka Kappa) takes a daring swipe at the Commander in Chief of the "War on Terror." 

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By tearing at the surface of his subjects, David Meanix seeks to expose an underlying truth.

 Sporting the signifiers of a top ranked tennis pro, Lucas Michael relives the fleeting moment of triumph. 
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