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Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing, 1960-91
Issue 251 - May 2025
|Frieze
Large panels filled with pages of zestfully handwritten notations set the tone for 'Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing, 1960-91' at Kunsthalle Wien.

Covering much of the ground-floor wall space is Hanne Darboven's Ein Jahrhundert ABC (One Century ABC, 1970-71), in which the artist sought to mark the passage of time using her own unique code, deftly connecting the renaissance origin of the term 'computer' - a person employed to calculate planetary positions for astronomers - to 20th-century artistic practices.
Presenting more than 100 works by 50 artists grouped into five sections, the self-described 'principally analogue exhibition about digital art' is a mammoth project that aims to amend the historiography of media art by including some of its neglected female pioneers. It comes on the heels of a wave of similar efforts in recent years, most prominently 'The Milk of Dreams', Cecilia Alemani's 2022 Venice Biennale, as well as a renewed interest in publications like Sadie Plant's Zeros + Ones: Digital Women and the New Technoculture (1997), which inspired the exhibition's curator, Michelle Cotton, artistic director of Kunsthalle Wien.

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