White Heat Cold Logic

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White Heat Cold Logic: British Computer Art 1960–1980
White Heat Cold Logic.jpg
EditorPaul Brown, Charlie Gere, Nicholas Lambert, Catherine Mason
CountryUnited States/United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesLeonardo Book Series
SubjectBritish computer art (1960–1980)
GenreNon-fiction, history of art, history of computing
PublisherMIT Press
Publication date
2008
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pagesxi+450
ISBNISBN:978-0-262-02653-6

White Heat Cold Logic (2008), edited by Paul Brown, Charlie Gere, Nicholas Lambert, and Catherine Mason, is a book about the history of British computer art during 1960–1980.[1]

Overview

The book includes 29 contributed chapters by a variety of authors. The book was published in 2008 by MIT Press,[2] in hardcover format. It also includes a series foreword by Sean Cubbitt, the editor-in-chief of the Leonardo Book Series.

Contributors

The following authors contributed chapters in the book:


  • Roy Ascott
  • Stephen Bell
  • Paul Brown
  • Stephen Bury
  • Harold Cohen
  • Ernest Edmonds
  • Maria Fernández
  • Simon Ford
  • John Hamilton Frazer
  • Jeremy Gardiner
  • Charlie Gere
  • Adrian Glew
  • Beryl Graham
  • Stan Hayward
  • Graham Howard
  • Richard Ihnatowicz
  • Malcolm Le Grice
  • Tony Longson
  • Brent MacGregor
  • George Mallen
  • Catherine Mason
  • Jasia Reichardt
  • Stephen A. R. Scrivener
  • Brian Reffin Smith
  • Alan Sutcliffe
  • Doron D. Swade
  • John Vince
  • Richard Wright
  • Aleksandar Zivanovic


Reviews

The book has been reviewed in a number of publications and online, including:

See also

  • Event One computer art exhibition (1969)

References

External links