James Hemsley, founder of the EVA Conferences, presenting at the
EVA London 2016 Conference.
The Electronic Visualisation and the Arts conferences (EVA Conferences for short, aka Electronic Information, the Visual Arts and Beyond) are a series of international
interdisciplinary conferences mainly in Europe, but also elsewhere in the world, for people interested in the application of information technology to the cultural and especially the
visual arts field, including
art galleries and museums.[1]
The conferences were initially overseen by EVA Conferences International, based in London. Conference proceedings are published[4] (e.g., for EVA London[5] and EVA Florence[6]). In addition, two collected volumes of revised papers are available.[7][8]
The artist
Jeremy Gardiner with his exhibit of the
Jurassic Coast at the V&A Digital Futures event organised as part of the EVA London 2016 conference, held at the
BCS offices in London, England on 11 July 2016The digital artist
Andy Lomas presenting at the EVA London 2016 conference at the BCS in central LondonKim H. Veltman delivering his keynote talk at the EVA London 2017 conference, 11 July 2017
EVA London
The EVA London conference, founded in 1990 by
James Hemsley,[9] is now organised through the
Computer Arts Society (CAS), a Specialist Group of the
BCS, each July at the BCS London office.[10]
In 2019, EVA London helped to co-organise the Event Twodigital art exhibition at the
Royal College of Art (RCA), held immediately after the conference, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Event One exhibition, also held at the
RCA.[15] The main chairs are
Jonathan Bowen,
Graham Diprose, Nick Lambert, and Jon Weinel.[16][17] From 2020, videos of presentations and links to papers in the proceedings have been archived by the
Computer Arts Society in the Computer Arts Archive.[18][19]
^"Publications". EVA London Conference. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
^EVA London 2007 Conference Proceedings, London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, UK, 11–13 July 2007. EVA Conferences International, 2007.
ISBN0-9543146-8-9.