An overview of the work done on Arts & Médias since the soft launch in summer 2020, and a quick mention of what's to come.
Featured Article
2020 Retrospective

Featured Article
An overview of the work done on Arts & Médias since the soft launch in summer 2020, and a quick mention of what's to come.
Latest Article Added
Already a hub of activity, two major research projects are underway, and a slate of new stories and favourites from the HOLO archive are due in 2021.
Ongoing Event
Oct 29, 2020, Bangkok, Thailand
BAB offers an array of artworks and performances from a diverse range of artists, both local and international, throughout the heart of Bangkok, in galleries, public spaces, and iconic landmarks
Ongoing Event
Dec 3, 2020, Montréal, Canada
An original participatory winter experience!
Featured Project
Hadi Jamali
Video installation, digital collages of children hurt by war on a screen a few meters before a map projected on a wall.
Featured Book
Katja Kwastek
An art-historical perspective on interactive media art that provides theoretical and methodological tools for understanding and analyzing digital art.
The Media Lab is a community of designers, researchers, and inventors who work together as members of research teams, doing things that conventional wisdom says can’t or shouldn't be done. The approximately 400 projects underway at the Lab are as varied as the students who conduct them: from tools for learning and expression, to innovative devices for human adaptation and augmentation, to new modes of transportation for tomorrow's smart cities.
Students come to the Media Lab through the Program in Media Arts and Sciences (MAS), based within MIT’s School of Architecture + Planning. Each year, the program accepts approximately 50 master’s and PhD candidates with backgrounds ranging from computer science to psychology, architecture to neuroscience, mechanical engineering to material science, and more.
MAS offers approximately 30 graduate courses and several undergraduate subjects. Media Lab courses explore several themes, including, for example, human-computer interaction, communications, learning, design, and entrepreneurship.
MIT’s Center for Bits and Atoms, an interdisciplinary initiative investigating the interface between computer science and physical science, also admits students through the Program in Media Arts and Sciences. The Center is known for its global network of digital fabrication facilities.
— Source: MIT's website