Talk:Perpetual art machine
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I feel that this is a very important resource on the internet dealing with video art and new media. From what I have heard they are in the process of forming their non-for-profit and are doing their best to help the medium. I have included the available press that I have found on them that I have found on their website and other places on the internet.
Compared to some of the things that I have seen slip through on Wiki this is a respectable research protal for 21st Century Video Art. Reciently the AIA (American Libraries Associaltion) listed them as an official research source. - McBride, Mark, American Library Association, Perpetual Art Machine, January 2007 http://www.ala.org/ala/acrlbucket/candrlnews/internetreviews/200701/perpetualartmachine.htm
Our organization would like to help the wiki community develop the resource of video art on the site. It is in our opinion lacking detailed content on this rapidly growing medium as an artform.
This is the first time we have made an attempt to add to the wiki community and understand that we may not have listed the information properly in the article. Any advice would be great help. We would like to do what we can to help.
The video artists Gary Hill, Miroslaw Rogala and G. H. Hovagimyan can validate the importance of this project. In addition to the Video Curators Michael Rush and John Handhardt
Best, Aaron Crowe
[edit] Don't delete Perpetual art machine
Perpetual Art Machine is a collabrative group of young artists who have come up with a new way to create an artists community with video art and artists. They are not a commercial concern. They are more like a utopian experiment. If anything I would say they share a lot with the wiki community. I believe the wiki page should be developed further rather than deleted. 70.44.23.207 21:24, 27 January 2007 (UTC) G. H. Hovagimyan