Daniel Djamo is a visual artist, filmmaker and researcher. Doctorate in Visual Arts at the Bucharest National University of Arts. Laureat of the Special Award for Documentary Film given by the Romanian Filmmakers Union. Among others he has exhibited/presented in: Louvre Museum, BOZAR – Palais des Beaux-Arts, Volkskundemuseum Wien, Arsenale di Venezia, Belgrade Museum of Contemporary Art, Kunstforum Wien, Museum of Moscow, OXO Tower Wharf (London), Mori Art Museum (Tokyo), Asia Culture Center and Asia Culture Institute (Gwangju), The History Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Skulpturenmuseum Glaskasten (Marl), MOCAK – Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow, MNAC – Bucharest Museum of Contemporary Art, etc. Between 2018 and 2020 he developed an artistic research project at the Joint Research Center of the European Commission.
Contributor: Daniel Djamo
A scientist’s opinion: Interview with Dr Jacopo Giuntoli on burning wood as renewable energy
Interview with Dr Jacopo Giuntoli, sustainability scientist, life cycle assessment expert and EU bioeconomy researcher, that is collaborating with the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission. Several Joint Research Centre (JRC) researchers, along with scientists from the European Environment Agency’s Scientific Committee, have stated that burning wood would have a larger impact on the ...
A scientist’s opinion: Interview with Alexander Peterhänsel about Art and AI
Interview with Alexander Peterhänsel, media artist, designer and Professor for Digital Media at the University of Applied Sciences Brandenburg focused on machine intelligence and creativity, design computation, ICT ethics and virtual- and augmented realities. He has been an artist in residence to the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission and his work is exhibited ...
Art-ificial or Art-istic Intelligence?
Computers are already learning how to compose music, write novels and draw like Picasso. But is AI capable of creating art on its own?
A scientist’s opinion: Interview with Henrik Junklewitz about Art and AI
Interview with Henrik Junklewitz. He received a diploma in physics in 2009 and a Ph.D in physics in 2014, both from the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. He has been a post-doctoral researcher in statistical inference, machine learning and imaging for astrophysics at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. Currently, he is a scientific project officer for machine learning with the ...
