TWO HANDS TWO FEET

An Exercise in Modern Verse

(Shockwave)

A mysterious lonely shore is the setting for an enigmatic recitation on a view of life's ultimate culmination. This piece is taken from a series that use the enhancement of 3D computer rendered realities to help to convey the inner most thoughts of the artist.



THE CATACOMBS OF THE MIND

A Full Length CD-ROM

(A series of still images from the CD-ROM)

This latest work focuses on various themes of self-introspection and observations upon the state of Western society at large. Each segment allows the participant to investigate a wide variety of topics through simulated experiences that range from editorializing present day reality to wandering within an abstract realm of unconscious dream world-like settings . The Macintosh O.S. CD-ROM is scheduled for release in 1997.



THE AUSTRALIAN INTERACTIVE

Explorations Of A Cultural Identity

(Shockwave)

Using both current and historical symbology from Australian culture, the "Australian Interactive" computer interactive sounds the gulf between the identifications of the conscious mind and the less obvious motivations of the unconscious. Through the use of photography and 3D modeled enviironments, the artist has re-interpreted the issue of cultural identity as reflected in objects and vistas in plain sight. The Shockwave version included in this site provides a look at many of the key vistas from the larger computer interactive piece.



OTHER SENSES OF THE WORLD

Cultural Mantras For America At The Precipice Of The Millenium

(Shockwave)

A symbolic treatise on the state of current values using the five senses with the inference of an additional sensibility. The motif in some ways recounts the late medieval period of Western Europe within which many works of art were carefully structured symbolically so as to function almost as a societal rebutt to the changing nature of the secular versus the religious of those times.



THE ARTIST

Scott Becker has taken a multi-disciplinary approach to his use of the personal computer attempting to integrate imagery that is both aesthetically pleasing and symbolically complex. His work has been shown on three continents and has also been featured in a variety of international publications.



For further details on this work contact:

artscb@interaccess.com







renconstructed 3/29/97