This item is licensed Korea Open Government License
dc.contributor.author
Littwin, Karolina
dc.contributor.author
G. Stock, Wolfgang
dc.date.accessioned
2021-04-02T07:23:02Z
dc.date.available
2021-04-02T07:23:02Z
dc.date.issued
2020-03-30
dc.identifier.issn
2287-4577
dc.identifier.uri
https://repository.kisti.re.kr/handle/10580/15502
dc.description.abstract
Informational urbanism is a new research area in information science. In this study, art history joins informational urbanism: Are digital artworks in public urban spaces recognized as essential assets of a smart city? We employed case study research, working with the example of the huge digital media façade of the Arthouse Graz as an artwork in a public space. In a mixed-methods approach, we asked passers-by and interviewed experts on Graz as a smart city and on the Arthouse’s role concerning the image of Graz as a smart city. The research found strong hints that indeed digital artworks with large screens or media façades at public spaces are parts of a city’s weak location factors as well as of the city’s urban structure and may symbolize the city’s smartness. A practical implication of this finding is that artists, computer and information scientists, city planners, and architects should include interactive contemporary digital art into city spaces in order to demonstrate the city’s way towards knowledge society.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language.iso
kor
dc.publisher
Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information
dc.relation.ispartofseries
Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice;Volume 8 Issue 1
dc.title
Signaling Smartness: Smart Cities and Digital Art in Public Spaces