Ruth Scheuing has created an interactive site called Walking the Line. Her artistic process begins with a simple digital line that traces the routes of her daily activities and ends with four layers of pattern, colour, images and textures – a collage of factual and fictional information that she finds on the World Wide Web.
Kai Chan’s project, called Everyday Blue, Green, Red and Yellow, was inspired by a two-thousand-year-old Chinese text called the Orchid Pavilion Essay, which is an epilogue to a poetry and drinking party. The essay’s calligraphic style is world-famous for its expressive, cursive elegance and has been revered by artists and scholars for centuries.
Joanna Berzowska has written her ‘autobiography,’ part fantasy and part reality – part prediction and part hopes and dreams. She imagines designing clothing and textiles that better her personal life and her professional aspirations as she moves from her 2007 age of 35, up to her 58th year in 2030.
Samuel Thomas has created an interactive experience that surveys the human search for peace. He envisions cross-cultural harmony and presents here a metaphorical Great Tree of Peace that can grow and grow without limits.