20 GOTO 10
20 GOTO 10 was an art gallery founded by Christopher Abad in San Francisco, California, United States. Its name is a reference to the traditional looping 'Hello world' program written by beginner programmers.[1] It featured both traditional and "hacker" art, with an emphasis on technology as art, or exhibits which make the potentially criminal or unethical aspects of computer security accessible to the public.[2][3]
It received more prominent vlog,[4] blog,[5][6][7] and print news coverage[8] when Kevin Olson displayed the first ever American showing of ANSI art in a physical art gallery. Jason Scott Sadofsky, creator of the BBS Documentary expressed interest[9] in the custom LCD scrollers based on a Parallax chipset with a custom ANSI scroller to VGA output written in SPIN made solely for the ANSI gallery show.[10]
The gallery was located at 679 Geary St. in San Francisco, and was defunct at this location as of Summer 2012.[8]
References
- ↑ Tandy Pocket Computer#Prog
- ↑ McMillan, Robert (IDG News service)San Francisco gallery shows hacker Joe Grand's work as art 2 PC World, IT World. 30 Oct 2007.
- ↑ 20 goto 10 nfo, 20 GOTO 10 website
- ↑ Slutsky, Irena. ANSI Art for the Masses Geek Entertainment TV. 21 Jan 2008.
- ↑ Johnson, Joel. ANSI Art Show at 20 GOTO 10 Gallery Boing Boing. 28 Jan 2008.
- ↑ Wortham, Jenna. ANSI Art Show Recalls Glory Days of MS-DOS. Wired blog network. 14 Jan 2008.
- ↑ Beale, Scott. ANSI Art Gallery Show at 20 Goto 10. Laughing Squid. 7 Jan 2008.
- 1 2 Lee, Ellen. Early computer-generated art revived for S.F. exhibit. San Francisco Chronicle. 12 Jan 2008.
- ↑ Scott, Jason. The ANSI Gallery. Textfiles.com. 5 Dec 2007.
- ↑ Olson, Kevin (acidjazz). lcd scroller board. ansi.notchill.com 17 Dec 2007.
External links
Coordinates: 37°47′11″N 122°24′51″W / 37.78632°N 122.41430°W