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 |  | Cory Arcangel is an artist and performer who 
                        works with early computers, the Internet, and video game 
                        systems. He is best known for his Nintendo game cartridge 
                        hacks, and his reworking of obsolete computer systems 
                        of the 1970s and '80s, such as the Commodore 64 and Atari 
                        800. Arcangel often works with the art collective/record 
                        label Beige, a loosely defined ensemble of artists and 
                        programmers who work collaboratively in digital media. 
                        Beige has produced videos, Web projects, and albums of 
                        electronic music, as well as modified Nintendo video game 
                        cartridges. Arcangel is also a member of the collective 
                        Radical Software Group (RSG). 
 Arcangel's works often assume multiple forms and iterations 
                        for specific contexts and audiences. A single work can 
                        move from source code to installation to video. For example, 
                        Super Mario Clouds, a Nintendo cartridge hack, 
                        originated as a downloadable Internet art piece, which 
                        was replicated, mutated and re-circulated by like-minded 
                        hackers. The same work was then reborn as a multi-projection 
                        installation that was shown in gallery and museum exhibitions 
                        and sold as an edition. Finally, Arcangel created a single-channel 
                        video version that is distributed to educational and cultural 
                        audiences. This case study looks at this and other works 
                        by Arcangel to explore the implications of their mutability 
                        for exhibition, collection and preservation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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