Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Desmond Paul Henry (Huddersfield, 5 de julio de 1921-Mánchester, 24 de octubre de 2004) fue un artista británico, pionero del arte computacional en la década de 1960 mediante la creación de imágenes curvilíneas complejas con máquinas de dibujo analógicas. [1]

    • 2004
    • Británica
  2. Desmond Paul Henry (1921–2004) was a Manchester University Lecturer and Reader in Philosophy (1949–82). He was one of the first British artists to experiment with machine-generated visual effects at the time of the emerging global computer art movement of the 1960s (The Cambridge Encyclopaedia 1990 p. 289; Levy 2006 pp. 178–180).

    • Anne-Marie, born 1948. Rita, born 1951. Elaine, born 1957.
    • Outputs of Drawing Machines 1,2 and 3
    • British
    • Louisa Henriette Bayen (1920-1992)
  3. Desmond Paul Henry ranks amongst one of the most important British pioneers of early computer art. His work during the 1960s, creating drawing machines adapted from cutting-edge WW2 computer technology, heralded developments which would lead to contemporary Digital Art.

  4. Desmond Paul Henry (1921-2004) ranks among one of the few early British pioneers of Computer Art/Graphics of the 1960's. During this period he constructed a total of three mechanical drawing machines (in 1960, '63 and '67) based around the components of analogue bomb-sight computers.

  5. 7 de mar. de 2011 · Es el británico Desmond Paul Henry (1921-2004), remoto profesor universitario experto en filosofía medieval, que inventó en su casa hace ahora 50 años su primera máquina de dibujar.

  6. Desmond Paul Henry | Archive. British Pioneer of Computer Art | Manchester's 1960's Precursor to Digital Art. A collection of rare archive items. Desmond Paul Henry - Archive. The machine in action.

  7. Desmond Paul Henry (1921-2004) was a Manchester University Lecturer and Reader in Philosophy (1949–82). He was one of the few early British pioneers of Computer Art/Graphics of the 1960's. He constructed three mechanical drawing machines (in 1961, '62 and '67) based around the components of analogue bomb-sight computers.