Skip to Content
logo_black2
logo_black2
  • About
    • What We Do
    • Board
    • Staff
    • ANAT Strategic Plan
    • Alumni Network
    • ANAT Press
    • Donations
    • Corporate
      • History
      • Annual Reports
      • ANAT 30 for 30
  • Program
    • ANAT SYNAPSE RESIDENCY
    • ANAT SYNAPSE FELLOWSHIP
    • ANAT SPECTRA 2025 Reciprocity
      • ANAT SPECTRA 2022
      • ANAT SPECTRA 2018
    • ANAT Google Arts & Culture Collection
    • Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship
    • Locale ANAT
    • Archive
  • Publications
    • ANAT DIGEST
    • ANAT Q&A
    • ANAT Emerging Writer Series
    • FILTER
  • News
  • Apply
  • Contact

Archive

Keith Armstrong, Analog Intelligence, 2023, (still) 4k video loop, Render created from Lidar (laser scan) aerial and terrestrial data set of the site.

2024

Brad Darkson, Never too hot, work-in-progress at ACE Studios, 2023. Photograph Taylor Parham.

2023

Opensource Starlink Tracker. Courtesy 2022 ANAT Synapse resident Anna Madeleine Raupach.

2022

Dr Helen Pynor and Dr Jimmy Breen, documentation, testing the collection of a shared breath sample using the R-tube device. Exhaled DNA will later be Two people face each other side-on, gripping a medical breathing tube and inhaling simultaneously. The image is closely cropped around their faces and chests, both wear black t-shirts and have dark hair. Dr Helen Pynor and Dr Jimmy Breen, documentation, testing the collection of a shared breath sample using the R-tube device. Exhaled DNA will later be extracted and sequenced. 2021. Image courtesy of the artist. ANAT SAHMRI residency, Adelaide, 2021.

2021

Niki Sperou, Biodegradable Seaweed Polymer Crisis Mask, 2020 ANAT Synapse resident. Image courtesy the artist. Niki Sperou, Biodegradable Seaweed Polymer Crisis Mask, 2020 ANAT Synapse resident. Image courtesy the artist.

2020

Artist Elizabeth Willing, 2019 ANAT AWRI resident, taste testing artwork. Artist Elizabeth Willing, 2019 ANAT AWRI resident, taste testing artwork.

2019

Helen Pynor, Development of the Visual Circuit of Drosophila melanogaster in 3 Acts: Larva; Pupa I; Pupa II, (still detail) 2018, Video, Duration 22 minutes 24 seconds, Performer: Iris Salecker. Videographer: Ben Gilbert, Wellcome Helen Pynor, Development of the Visual Circuit of Drosophila melanogaster in 3 Acts: Larva; Pupa I; Pupa II, (still detail) 2018, Video, Duration 22 minutes 24 seconds, Performer: Iris Salecker. Videographer: Ben Gilbert, Wellcome

2018

Baden Pailthorpe, Clanger (longitude, latitude, decibels), [installation view] 2018. HD video, 4.1 channel surround sound. 06.30 mins. Photo: Jessica Maurer Baden Pailthorpe, Clanger (longitude, latitude, decibels), [installation view] 2018. HD video, 4.1 channel surround sound. 06.30 mins. Photo: Jessica Maurer

2017

Daniel Savage, Daniel – Quadraplegic / Will you ever get better? 2014, No offense, but… 1-16 (of 18),. Inkjet prints, 50 x 70cm Daniel Savage, Daniel – Quadraplegic / Will you ever get better? 2014, No offense, but… 1-16 (of 18),. Inkjet prints, 50 x 70cm

2016

Linda Dement, Cyberflesh Girlmonster, 1995. Linda Dement, Cyberflesh Girlmonster, 1995.

Older

CONTACT

L7, 144 North Terrace
Adelaide, SA 5000

Phone: 61 (0) 8 8231 9037

Email: [email protected]

SUBSCRIBE HERE
Go to Creative Australia Website Go to Arts of South Australia website
  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • © ANAT
  • All Rights Reserved 2025

ANAT and our project partners acknowledge and pay respects to the First Nations of the land known as Australia. We recognise all Traditional Owners and their continued cultural, spiritual and technological practices. We also acknowledge and pay respects to all First Nations peoples beyond Australian shores. As the very first storytellers, First Nations peoples hold invaluable knowledge and perspectives that are vital in the research, interrogation and development of traditional and emerging technologies, across both our physical and digital realms. Together we are gathering across many unceded lands that have been forcibly colonised. ANAT works on Kaurna yarta.

ANAT is assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia and the South Australian government through the Department of Premier and Cabinet, CreateSA.

ANAT and our project partners acknowledge and pay respects to the First Nations of the land known as Australia.

We recognise all Traditional Owners and their continued cultural, spiritual and technological practices.

We also acknowledge and pay respects to all First Nations peoples beyond Australian shores. As the very first storytellers, First Nations peoples hold invaluable knowledge and perspectives that are vital in the research, interrogation and development of traditional and emerging technologies, across both our physical and digital realms.

Together we are gathering across many unceded lands that have been forcibly colonised.

ANAT works on Kaurna yarta.