In Baron and Goodwin's Lossless series the “materiality” of the digital becomes the source-code for experimental execution. The artists' renditions of appropriated films are certainly not “lossless” (i.e. a copy of the original in which nothing is lost), but rather gainful: through various techniques of digital disruption – compression, file-sharing, the removal of essential digital information – the artists reveal the gain of a “new” media, full of material forms ripe for aesthetic sleuthing. -Braxton Soderman

We’ve seen The Wizard of Oz more times than any other movie. We may imagine it playing on a big screen in full Technicolor as it was shown in 1939. But the truth is that we’ve only seen it on television. Now that we may buy the digitally enhanced DVD and watch The Wizard of Oz on our laptop computers, we wanted to know exactly how the media had changed. By capturing the differences between a 35mm print and a digital version, lossless shows exactly what has changed.

exhibitions

press image here

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 still from Lossless #1     
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 still from Lossless #1     
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 still from Lossless #1