Cyberarts

For instance, a common type of cyberart which is produced programmatically by applying a set of design rules to a natural or preexisting process.

The word "CyberArts" is claimed as a registered trademark by Miller Freeman Inc., promoter of a series of multi-media technology conferences known as CyberArts International during the early 1990s.

[1] "Recent works of bioart propose to connect the viewer, transformed into a user, with different biological organisms by pirating their biometric data using digital interfaces.

These immersive aesthetic propositions are based on a plural conception of the human body, forged in the crucible of cybernetics.

Their new modes of communication explore the alternative path of an ecological continuum where the user enters a becoming-cyborg, far from the classic representations of human-machine coupling.