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Logo Prix Ars Electronica

The Prix Ars Electronica is one of the all-time known and longest running yearly prizes in the field of electronic and interactive fine art, computer blitheness, digital civilisation and music. It has been awarded since 1987 past Ars Electronica (Linz, Republic of austria).

In 2005, the Golden Nica, the highest prize, was awarded in six categories: "Computer Animation/Visual Effects," "Digital Musics," "Interactive Fine art," "Net Vision," "Digital Communities" and the "u19" award for "freestyle computing." Each Aureate Nica came with a prize of €10,000, apart from the u19 category, where the prize was €5,000. In each category, there are also Awards of Distinction and Honorary Mentions.

The Gilt Nica is replica of the Greek Nike of Samothrace. It is a handmade wooden statuette, plated with gold, so each trophy is unique: approximately 35 cm high, with a wingspan of about 20 cm, all on a pedestal. "Prix Ars Electronica" is a phrase equanimous of French, Latin and Spanish words, loosely translated equally "Electronic Arts Prize."

Golden Nica winners [edit]

Computer animation / film / vfx [edit]

The "Figurer Graphics" category (1987–1994) was open to different kinds of computer images. The "Computer Animation" (1987–1997) was replaced past the current "Computer Animation/Visual Effects" category in 1998.

Computer Graphics [edit]

  • 1987 – Figur10 past Brian Reffin Smith, UK
  • 1988 – The Battle by David Sherwin, Usa
  • 1989 – Gramophone by Tamás Waliczky, HU
  • 1990 – P-411-A by Manfred Mohr, Germany
  • 1991 – Having encountered Eve for the second time, Adam begins to speak by Nib Woodard, US
  • 1992 – RD Texture Buttons by Michael Kass and Andrew Witkin, U.s.a.
  • 1993 – Founders Series by Michael Tolson, US
  • 1994 – Jellylife / Jellycycle / Jelly Locomotion by Michael Joaquin Greyness, US

Estimator Animation [edit]

  • 1987 – Luxo Jr. by John Lasseter, Usa
  • 1988 – Reddish'southward Dream past John Lasseter, U.s.
  • 1989 – Broken Heart by Joan Staveley, US
  • 1990 – Footprint past Mario Sasso and Nicola Sani, IT
  • 1991 – Panspermia by Karl Sims, Us
  • 1992 – Liquid Selves / Primordial Dance by Karl Sims, United states
  • 1993 – Lakmé by Pascal Roulin, BE
  • 1994 – Jurassic Park by Dennis Muren, Mark Dippé and Steve Williams, The states/CA
    • Distinction: Quarxs by Maurice Benayoun, FR
    • Distinction: K.O. Kid by Marc Caro, FR
  • 1995 – God's Little Monkey past David Atherton and Bob Sabiston, United states of america
  • 1996 – Toy Story by John Lasseter, Lee Unkrich and Ralph Eggleston, US
  • 1997 – Dragonheart by Scott Squires, Industrial Calorie-free & Magic (ILM), US

Computer Blitheness/Visual Furnishings [edit]

Chris Lavis with the Golden Nica for "Madame Tutli-Putli" (2008)

  • 1998 – The Sitter by Liang-Yuan Wang, TW
    • Titanic by Robert Legato and Digital Domain, US
  • 1999 – Bunny past Chris Wedge, US
    • What Dreams May Come by Mass Illusions, Pop, Digital Domain, Vincent Ward, Stephen Simon and Barnet Bain, United states of america
  • 2000 – Maly Milos past Jakub Pistecky, CA
    • Maaz by Christian Volckman, FR
  • 2001 – Le Processus past Xavier de l'Hermuzičre and Philippe Grammaticopoulos, FR
  • 2002 – Monsters, Inc. by Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich, Pete Docter and David Silverman, US
  • 2003 – Tim Tom by Romain Segaud and Cristel Pougeoise, FR
  • 2004 – Ryan by Chris Landreth, US.
    • Distinction: Parenthèse from Francois Blondeau, Thibault Deloof, Jérémie Droulers, Christophe Stampe, French republic
    • Distinction: Birthday Boy from Sejong Park, Australia
  • 2005 – Fallen Art by Tomek Baginski, Poland.
    • Distinction: The Incredibles from Pixar
    • Stardom: City Paradise by Gaëlle Denis (Great britain), Passion Pictures (FR)
  • 2006 – 458nm by Jan Bitzer, Ilija Brunck, Tom Weber, Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
    • Distinction: Kein platz Für Gerold by Daniel Nocke / Studio Film Bilder, Germany
    • Distinction: Negadon, the monster from Mars, by Jun Awazu, Nihon
  • 2007 – Codehunters by Ben Hibon, (U.k.)
  • 2008 – Madame Tutli-Putli by Chris Lavis, Maciek Szczerbowski. (Directors), Jason Walker (Special Visual Effects), National Moving picture Board of Canada
  • 2009 – HA'Aki by Iriz Pääbo, National Film Board of Canada
  • 2010 – Nuit Blanche by Arev Manoukian (Director), Marc-André Greyness (Visual Effects Artist), National Film Board of Canada
  • 2011 – Metachaos by Alessandro Bavari (Information technology)
  • 2012 – Rear Window Loop by Jeff Desom (LU)
    • Stardom: Caldera by Evan Viera/Orchid Blitheness (US)
    • Distinction: Ascension of the Planet of the Apes by Weta Digital (NZ)/Twentieth Century Fox
  • 2013 – Forms past Quayola (Information technology), Memo Akten (TR)
    • Distinction: Duku Spacemarines by La Mécanique du Plastique (FR)
    • Distinction: Oh Willy… past Emma De Swaef (Exist), Marc James Roels (Exist) / Beast Animation
  • 2014 – Walking City by Universal Everything (UK)[1]
  • 2015 – Temps Mort by Alex Verhaest (BE)[2][one]
    • Distinction: Bär by Pascal Floerks (DE)[2]
    • Distinction: The Reflection of Power by Mihai Grecu (RO/HU)[2]

Digital Music [edit]

This category is for those making electronic music and audio fine art through digital means. From 1987 to 1998 the category was known as "Computer music." Two Aureate Nicas were awarded in 1987, and none in 1990. In that location was no Computer Music category in 1991.

  • 1987 – Peter Gabriel and Jean-Claude Risset
  • 1988 – Denis Smalley
  • 1989 – Kaija Saariaho
  • 1990 – None
  • 1991 – Category omitted
  • 1992 – Alejandro Viñao
  • 1993 – Bernard Parmegiani
  • 1994 – Ludger Brümmer
  • 1995 – Trevor Wishart
  • 1996 – Robert Normandeau
  • 1997 – Matt Heckert
  • 1998 – Peter Bosch and Simone Simons (joint award)
  • 1999 – Come to Daddy past Aphex Twin (Richard D. James) and Chris Cunningham (joint award)
    • Distinction: Birthdays by Ikue Mori (JP)
    • Distinction: Mego (label), Hotel Paral.lel by Christian Fennesz, Seven Tons For Gratis by Peter Rehberg (a.k.a. Pita)
  • 2000 – 20' to 2000 by Carsten Nicolai
    • Distinction: Minidisc by Gescom
    • Distinction: Outside the Circle of Fire by Chris Watson
  • 2001 – Matrix by Ryoji Ikeda
  • 2002 – Man'yo Wounded 2001 by Yasunao Tone
  • 2003 – Ami Yoshida, Sachiko Thousand and Utah Kawasaki (joint award)
  • 2004 – Banlieue du Vide by Thomas Köner
  • 2005 – TEO! A Sonic Sculpture by Maryanne Amacher
  • 2006 – L'île ré-sonante by Eliane Radigue
  • 2007 – Reverse-Simulation Music past Mashiro Miwa
  • 2008 – Reactable by Sergi Jordà (ES), Martin Kaltenbrunner (AT), Günter Geiger (AT) and Marcos Alonso (ES)
  • 2009 – Speeds of Time versions ane and 2 by Bill Fontana (The states)
  • 2010 – rheo: 5 horizons by Ryoichi Kurokawa (JP)
  • 2011 – Free energy Field by Jana Winderen (NO)
  • 2012 – "Crystal Sounds of a Synchrotron"[3] by Jo Thomas (GB)
  • 2013 – frequencies (a) by Nicolas Bernier (CA)
    • Stardom: SjQ++ by SjQ++ (JP)
    • Distinction: Borderlands Granular by Chris Carlson (U.s.)
  • 2015 – Chijikinkutsu by Nelo Akamatsu (JP)
    • Distinction: Drumming is an elastic concept past Josef Klammer (AT)
    • Distinction: Under Style past Douglas Henderson (DE)
  • 2017 – Not Your Earth Music: Noise In South East Asia by Cedrik Fermont (CD/BE/DE), Dimitri della Faille (BE/CA)
    • Stardom: Gamelan Wizard by Lucas Abela (AU), Wukir Suryadi (ID) und Rully Shabara (ID)
    • Distinction: Corpus Nil past Marco Donnarumma (DE/IT)

Hybrid art [edit]

  • 2007 – SymbioticaSymbiotica
  • 2008 – Pollstream – Nuage Vert[4] by Helen Evans (FR/U.k.) and Heiko Hansen (FR/DE) HeHe
  • 2009 – Natural History of the Enigma by Eduardo Kac (Usa)
  • 2010 – Ear on Arm by Stelarc (AU)
  • 2011 – May the Horse Live in me by Art Orienté Objet (FR)
  • 2012 – Bacterial radio [5] by Joe Davis (US)
  • 2013 – Cosmopolitan Chicken Project, Koen Vanmechelen (Exist)
  • 2015 – Plantas Autofotosintéticas, Gilberto Esparza (MX)
  • 2017 – Thou-9_topology, Maja Smrekar (SI)

[the side by side thought] voestalpine Art and Technology Grant [edit]

  • 2009 – Open_Sailing by Open_Sailing Crew[half dozen] [seven] led by Cesar Harada.
  • 2010 – Hostage by [Frederik De Wilde].[8]
  • 2011 – Choke Point Project by P2P Foundation (NL).[9]
  • 2012 – qaul.cyberspace – tools for the adjacent revolution by Christoph Wachter & Mathias Jud[10]
  • 2013 – Hyperform by Marcelo Coelho (BR), Skylar Tibbits (US), Natan Linder (IL), Yoav Reaches (IL)
    • Honorary Mentions: GravityLight by Martin Riddiford (GB), Jim Reeves (GB)[11]
  • 2014 – BlindMaps by Markus Schmeiduch, Andrew Spitz and Ruben van der Vleuten[i] [12]
  • 2015 – SOYA C(O)U(50)TURE by XXLab (ID) – Irene Agrivina Widyaningrum, Asa Rahmana, Ratna Djuwita, Eka Jayani Ayuningtias, Atinna Rizqiana[2]

Interactive Art [edit]

Prizes in the category of interactive art have been awarded since 1990. This category applies to many categories of works, including installations and performances, characterized by audience participation, virtual reality, multimedia and telecommunication.

  • 1990 – Videoplace installation by Myron Krueger
  • 1991 – Think About the People Now project by Paul Sermon
  • 1992 – Abode of the Brain installation by Monika Fleischmann and Wolfgang Strauss
  • 1993 – Simulationsraum-Mosaik mobiler Datenklänge (smdk) installation by Knowbotic Research
  • 1994 – A-Volve environs by Christa Sommerer and Laurent Mignonneau
  • 1995 – the concept of Hypertext, attributed to Tim Berners-Lee
  • 1996 – Global Interior Projection installation by Masaki Fujihata
  • 1997 – Music Plays Images X Images Play Music concert by Ryuichi Sakamoto and Toshio Iwai
  • 1998 – Earth Peel, a Photo Safari in the Land of State of war installation past Jean-Baptiste Barrière and Maurice Benayoun
  • 1999 – Difference Engine #three by construct and Lynn Hershman
  • 2000 – Vectorial Summit, Relational Architecture #4 installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
  • 2001 – polar installation by Carsten Nicolai and Marko Peljhan
  • 2002 – north-cha(n)t installation past David Rokeby
  • 2003 – Tin can Yous See Me Now? participatory game by Smash Theory and Mixed Reality Lab
  • 2004 – Listening Mail service installation past Ben Rubin and Mark Hansen
  • 2005 – MILKproject installation and project by Esther Polak, Ieva Auzina and RIXC – Riga Centre for New Media Culture
  • 2006 – The Messenger installation by Paul DeMarinis
  • 2007 – Park View Hotel installation by Ashok Sukumaran
  • 2008 – Image Fulgurator [13] by Julius von Bismarck (Federal republic of germany)
  • 2009 – Nemo Observatorium by Laurence Malstaf (Kingdom of belgium)
  • 2010 – The Eyewriter [14] by Zachary Lieberman, Evan Roth, James Powderly, Theo Watson, Chris Sugrue, Tempt1
  • 2011 – Newstweek [xv] by Julian Oliver (NZ) and Danja Vasiliev (RU)
  • 2012 – Memopol-two [16] by Timo Toots (EE)
  • 2013 – Pendulum Choir By Michel Décosterd (CH), André Décosterd (CH)
    • Distinction – Rain Room by rAndom International (GB)
    • Distinction – Voices of Aliveness past Masaki Fujihata (JP)
  • 2014 – Loophole for All by Paolo Cirio(Information technology)[17]
  • 2016 – Tin can you hear me? by Mathias Jud(DE), Christoph Wachter (CH)

[edit]

In the categories "World Wide Spider web" (1995–96) and ".net" (1997–2000), interesting web-based projects were awarded, based on criteria like spider web-specificity, community-orientation, identity and interactivity. In 2001, the category became broader under the new proper noun "Net Vision / Internet Excellence", with rewards for innovation in the online medium.

Www [edit]

  • 1995 – Idea Futures by Robin Hanson
  • 1996 – Digital Hijack by etoy
    • Second prizes: HyGrid past SITO and Journey equally an exile

.cyberspace [edit]

  • 1997 – Sensorium by Taos Projection
  • 1998 – IO_Dencies Questioning Urbanity by Knowbotic Enquiry
  • 1999 – Linux by Linus Torvalds
  • 2000 – In the Offset... Was the Command Line (excerpts) by Neal Stephenson

Cyberspace Vision / Internet Excellence [edit]

  • 2001 – Banja by Team cHmAn and "PrayStation"[18] past Joshua Davis
  • 2002 – Carnivore [nineteen] by Radical Software Group and "They Dominion"[20] by Josh On and Futurefarmers
  • 2003 – Habbo Hotel and Noderunner past Yury Gitman and Carlos J. Gomez de Llarena
  • 2004 – Creative Commons
  • 2005 – Processing past Benjamin Fry, Casey Reas and the Processing community
  • 2006 – The Road Moving-picture show by exonemo

Digital Communities [edit]

Danny Wool, representing Wikipedia, receives a 2004 Golden Nica.

A category begun in 2004 with support from SAP (and a separate ceremony in New York City ii months before the main Ars Electronica ceremony) to celebrate the 25th birthday of Ars Electronica. Two Golden Nicas were awarded.

  • 2004 – Wikipedia and The World Starts With Me
    • Distinction:
      • Open-Clothes[21]
  • 2005 – Akshaya, an it development plan in Republic of india
    • Distinction: Gratuitous Software Foundation (USA) and Telestreet – NewGlobalVision (Italy)
  • 2006 – canal*ACCESSIBLE[22]
    • Distinction:
      • Codecheck (Roman Bleichenbacher CH)
      • Proyecto Cyberela – Radio Telecentros (CEMINA)
    • Honorary Mentions:
      • Arduino (Arduino)
      • Charter97.org – News from Republic of belarus
      • CodeTree
      • MetaReciclagem
      • Mountain Forum
      • Northfield.org
      • Pambazuka News (Fahamu
      • Semapedia
      • stencilboard.at (Stefan Eibelwimmer (AT), Günther Kolar (AT))
      • The Freecycle Network
      • The Organic Urban center
      • UgaBYTES Initiative (UgaBYTES Initiative (UG))
  • 2007 – Overmundo[23]
  • 2008 – 1 kg more than[24]
    • Distinction: PatientsLikeMe and Global Voices Online
  • 2009 – HiperBarrio[25] past Álvaro Ramírez and Gabriel Jaime Vanegas
    • Distinction:
      • piratbyran.org[26]
      • wikileaks.org[27]
    • Honorary Mentions:
      • hackmeeting.org[28]
      • pad.ma[29]
      • Maneno
      • femalepressure.net[30]
      • metamute.org[31]
      • ubu.com[32]
      • canchas.org[33]
      • feraltrade.org[34]
      • flossmanuals.net[35]
      • wikiartpedia.org[36]
      • changemakers.net[37]
      • vocesbolivianas.org[38]
  • 2010 – Chaos Computer Club
  • 2011 – Fundacion Ciudadano Inteligente[39]
    • Distinction:
      • Bentham Papers Transcription Initiative (Transcribe Bentham)[xl] (United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland). Meet also the project's Transcription Desk-bound[41]
      • X_MSG[42]
  • 2012 – Syrian people know their way[43]
  • 2013 – El Campo de Cebada by El Campo de Cebada (ES)
    • Stardom: Refugees United by Christopher Mikkelsen (DK), David Mikkelsen (DK)
    • Distinction: Visualizing Palestine by Visualizing Palestine (PS)
  • 2014 – Project Fumbaro Eastern Nippon past Takeo Saijo (JP) [44] [45]

Run across besides [edit]

  • Listing of calculator-related awards

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The winners 2014". Ars Electronica Blog . Retrieved 2022-02-10 .
  2. ^ a b c d "Prix Ars Electronica 2015: 2,889 entries from 75 countries …". Ars Electronica Press . Retrieved 2022-02-ten .
  3. ^ "PRIX ARS". prix2012.aec.at.
  4. ^ "Nuage Vert". www.nuagevert.org. Archived from the original on 2011-10-04. Retrieved 2019-02-21 .
  5. ^ "PRIX ARS". prix2012.aec.at.
  6. ^ "International Body of water Station". Scoutbots.
  7. ^ "Prix 2009". Archived from the original on 25 October 2010. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
  8. ^ "Prix 2010". Archived from the original on 25 Oct 2010. Retrieved 20 Feb 2011.
  9. ^ "Prix 2011". Retrieved 13 July 2011. [ permanent dead link ]
  10. ^ "Ars Electronica archive". Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  11. ^ "WINNERS 2017". Archived from the original on July 1, 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  12. ^ "BlindMaps: City Navigation for visually impaired People". Ars Electronica Blog . Retrieved 2022-02-10 .
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-29. Retrieved 2008-08-28 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ "EyeWriter". www.eyewriter.org. Archived from the original on 2010-07-22. Retrieved 2011-05-07 .
  15. ^ "Newstweek – fixing the facts". newstweek.com. Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2011-07-13 .
  16. ^ Toots, Timo. "Timo Toots – Memopol-two". works.timo.ee. Archived from the original on 2012-08-15. Retrieved 2012-08-fifteen .
  17. ^ "The winners 2014". Ars Electronica Weblog . Retrieved 2022-02-10 .
  18. ^ "PrayStation". www.praystation.com.
  19. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2004-06-05. Retrieved 2004-05-07 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived re-create every bit championship (link)
  20. ^ http://www.theyrule.cyberspace/
  21. ^ "Ars Electronica Archiv".
  22. ^ "Persones amb mobilitat reduida transmeten des de telèfons mòbils". www.zexe.cyberspace.
  23. ^ http://www.overmundo.com.br
  24. ^ http://world wide web.1KG.org/ Archived 2008-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ "hiperbarrio.org". hiperbarrio.org.
  26. ^ "Archived re-create". Archived from the original on 2004-10-01. Retrieved 2004-10-01 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as championship (link)
  27. ^ "WikiLeaks". wikileaks.org.
  28. ^ "hackmeeting.org". www.hackmeeting.org.
  29. ^ "Pad.ma". Pad.ma.
  30. ^ Indigo, Andrea Mayr, Electrical. "female:force per unit area". world wide web.femalepressure.internet.
  31. ^ "Mute – we gladly feast on those who would subdue united states – Mute". www.metamute.org.
  32. ^ "UbuWeb". ubu.com.
  33. ^ "Canchas. Spontaneous soccer fields".
  34. ^ "feral trade courier". world wide web.feraltrade.org.
  35. ^ English, FLOSS Manuals. "Floss Manuals – Free Manuals for Gratuitous Software". www.flossmanuals.net.
  36. ^ http://www.wikiartpedia.org Archived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Auto
  37. ^ "Changemakers". changemakers.net.
  38. ^ "Vocesbolivianas – Your FL Lawyer Blog". www.vocesbolivianas.org. Archived from the original on 2019-09-16. Retrieved 2020-05-11 .
  39. ^ "Fundación Ciudadano Inteligente". www.ciudadanointeligente.cl. Archived from the original on 2014-02-09. Retrieved 2011-07-08 .
  40. ^ "UCL Transcribe Bentham". www.ucl.ac.uk.
  41. ^ "Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk". www.transcribe-bentham.da.ulcc.ac.uk.
  42. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2011-07-08 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  43. ^ "PRIX ARS". prix2012.aec.at.
  44. ^ "The winners 2014". Ars Electronica Web log . Retrieved 2022-02-ten .
  45. ^ "Project Fumbaro Eastern Nippon – Getting Aid to Those Who Need It". Ars Electronica Weblog . Retrieved 2022-02-10 .

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • ARS ELECTRONICA ARCHIVE - PRIX
  • Past winners
  • Past winners (in german, more than detailed)
  • Prix Ars Electronica 1987–1990 (in German)

northandoweent.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prix_Ars_Electronica