Biancoshock: “WEB 0.0”

Vídeo

Nem sempre se consegue aceder à internet e as ligações telefónicas não são propriamente exemplares. Em Civitacampomarano, pequena aldeia italiana na província de Campobasso, as pessoas comunicam à maneira antiga. São pouco mais de 400 os habitantes, quase todos idosos, e a tecnologia não faz parte do dicionário deles. O artista urbano Fra Biancoshock já nos habituou às suas intervenções pouco convencionais (como a das bolhas de plástico anti-stress que instalou em paragens de autocarro) e incómodas (numa passagem pelo Porto, em 2014, criou um trabalho sobre os sem-abrigo que era um murro no estômago: “You cant’t change your life, You can change your dreams”). Biancoshock é, usando as palavras dele, um “efemerealista” com a missão de produzir obras de arte efémeras no espaço mas eternas no tempo. Foi o que tentou fazer em Civitacampomarano. Ali pode não haver vida 2.0 mas as funções das redes sociais estão todas preenchidas: uma cabine telefónica em vez do WhatsApp, um marco de correio a substituir o Gmail, um mural onde se colocam avisos para servir de Facebook, uma moto de três rodas a fazer a função do We Transfer, uma loja de portas abertas que é um eBay real ou a habitante Zia Cesira, uma verdadeira Wikipedia. São apenas alguns exemplos. “A ideia provocadora é mostrar que essas funções virtuais, consideradas pela grande maioria da população como necessárias e essenciais para a vida quotidiana, também existem no país onde a conexão é difícil de alcançar”, escreveu na descrição do projecto Web 0.0 o artista que vive em Milão. Esta “internet da vida real” quer mostrar que estes instrumentos tecnológicos sempre existiram, nas tradições e cultura popular. Há vida para além do ecrã.

via Público

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Vimeo Festival Awards 2012, os vencedores

Vimeo

Aqui estão os vencedores das 13 categorias.

WINNER: FASHION
A video showcasing a fashion or beauty collection or trend with moving image.
MULBERRY ‘SKIRT’, BY ACADEMY PLUS (A+)

WINNER: REMIX
A video that is created using images, sequences or audio from existing works to make a new, original, independent piece.
REAR WINDOW TIMELAPSE, BY JEFF DESOM

WINNER: ADVERTISING
A short video commissioned by a brand or advertising agency to promote a company, product or service.
K-SWISS – KENNY POWERS MFCEO, BY CAVIAR

WINNER: MOTION GRAPHICS
The use of graphic design principles to create a video using animation or filmic techniques.
A HISTORY OF THE TITLE SEQUENCE, BY JURJEN VERSTEEG

WINNER: LYRICAL
A video that showcases the natural world or personal experience using a distinct creative style.
SYMMETRY, BY EVERYNONE

WINNER: CAPTURED
A video that captures your own artistic expression or performance as the subject.
SWEATSHOPPE VIDEO PAINTING EUROPE, BY SWEATSHOPPE

WINNER: DOCUMENTARY
A short video that presents a factual report on a chosen subject or idea.
AMAR (ALL GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS REQUIRE TIME), BY PILGRIM FILMS

WINNER: NARRATIVE
Live action narrative fiction told through the medium of film/video.
BLINKY™, BY RUAIRI ROBINSON

WINNER: MUSIC VIDEO
A short video that accompanies a complete piece of music or song.
MANCHESTER ORCHESTRA – “SIMPLE MATH”, BY DANIELS

WINNER: ACTION SPORTS
A video that uses filmmaking to creatively showcase action sports.
DARK SIDE OF THE LENS, BY ASTRAY FILMS

WINNER: EXPERIMENTAL
A video that experiments with new ideas and/or techniques, often characterized by the absence of a linear narrative.
PRIE DIEU, BY COKAU

WINNER: SERIES
A set of related or thematic videos, released periodically.
OFTEN AWESOME THE SERIES, BY ALL ACES MEDIA

WINNER: ANIMATION
A story told by giving life to inanimate objects or character designs using computer technology or frame by frame animation.
UMBRA (HD – 2010), BY MALCOLM SUTHERLAND

Saiba tudo no site oficial do Vimeo Festival Awards

Street Ghosts project – Google Street View made Street Art and Public Concern

In the hippest areas for Street Art, life-sized pictures of people found on Google’s Street View are printed and posted without authorization at the same spot where they were taken. 

Browse through the Map, which has the links to the original screenshots and to related photos documenting affixed paper posters. Or browse through photos of the ghosts.

Keep your eyes open! 

Street Ghosts, artist’s statement: 

In this project, I exposed the specters of Google’s eternal realm of private, misappropriated data: the bodies of people captured by Google’s Street View cameras, whose ghostly, virtual presence I marked in Street Art fashion at the precise spot in the real world where they were photographed.

Street Ghosts hit some of the most important international Street Art “halls of fame” with low-resolution, human scale posters of people taken from Google Street View. These images do not offer details, but the blurred colors and lines on the posters give a gauzy, spectral aspect to the human figures, unveiling their presence like a digital shadow haunting the real world.

This ready-made artwork simply takes the information amassed by Google as material to be used for art, despite its copyrighted status and private source. As the publicly accessible pictures are of individuals taken without their permission, I reversed the act: I took the pictures of individuals without Google’s permission and posted them on public walls. In doing so, I highlight the viability of this sort of medium as an artistic material ready to comment and shake our society. 
The collections of data that Google and similar corporations have become the material of everyday life, yet their source is the personal information of private individuals. By remixing and reusing this material, I artistically explore the boundaries of ownership and exposure of this publicly displayed, privately-held information about our personal lives.

In this case, the artwork becomes a performance, re-contextualizing not only data, but also a conflict. It’s a performance on the battlefield, playing out a war between public and private interests for winning control on our intimacy and habits, which can change permanently depending on the victor. Who has more strength in this war? The artist, the firm, the legislators, the public concern or the technology? This reconfiguration of informational power provokes engagement between those social agents, who are recruited through simple visual exposure.

Ghostly human bodies appear as casualties of the info-war in the city, a transitory record of collateral damage from the battle between corporations, governments, civilians and algorithms. Some of this battle has played out in the courts: for instance, the Swiss and German governments have placed legal restrictions [1] on Google, claiming that capturing people on the street in this way violates their privacy. Google rejoins with the accuracy of its facial blurring algorithm, though it doesn’t always work [2]. But even if it does, this is hypocrisy: the rest of their bodies, their hair or clothes are more than enough to identify them, especially for someone really interested in their private lives. 

On the street, the public encounters the random victims of this war as unclear, impermanent colors and shapes, inclined to fade away but always there, like ghosts haunting the streets and sometimes reappearing from the ethereal hells of digital archives.

The obscure figures fixed to the walls are the murky intersection of two overlain worlds: the real world of things and people, from which these images were originally captured, and the virtual afterlife of data and copyrights, from which the images were retaken. The virtual world, as a transposition of the real world into an enclosure owned by multinational corporations, is no less real for its seeming withdrawal; it has material effects. Media is the interface that bridges the two worlds, and maintains a constant mutual influence between them. By going back to the spot where information has been extracted from the physical world and de-virtualizing it, critical points emerge.

Google didn’t ask permission to appropriate images of all the world’s towns and cities [3], nor did it pay anything to do so. It sells ads against this public and private content, and then resells the information collected to the same advertisers, making billions that aren’t even taxed [4]. It’s a sort of exploitation by a giant social parasite that resells us what was collectively created by people’s activity and money.

The public display of this biopolitical surplus from Google’s value-harvesting campaigns – the people aren’t supposed to appear in the pictures, but they do – appropriates their aesthetic and political value, as opposed to the commercial. Google appropriates the social labor we perform by constituting the public; simply by investing the city with social meaning, we unintentionally provide value for Google to capture. This Street Art intervenes by confronting the public with the aesthetic qualities of the data they didn’t even know they were alienating, and forces them to reckon with the possibility of their own image appearing as ghostly slaves trapped in a digital world forever.

Paolo Cirio. 
NYC, Septemebr 15th 2012.

 

Street Ghosts hasn’t ended, and it may appear soon in your city and maybe with your ghost! 


Press Image for Street Ghosts project – Download HD version or Small version. 12 Cheshire Str., London – Link Street View

 

Selected pictures on the streets of London, NYC and Berlin. See all the pictures.


Ebor Street, London – Link Street View from 2008Press pictures in High Resolution

 


80 East Houston Street, New York – Link Street View from 2011Press pictures in High Resolution

 


214 Lafayette Street, New York – Link Street View from 2009 Press pictures in High Resolution

 


Dircksenstraße / Rochstraße, Berlin – Link Street View from 2008 Press pictures in High Resolution

 


Paolo Cirio just after having sabotaged the tricycle of Google Stree View in Central Park, NYC, summer 2012. HD version.

via streetghosts.net

Instalação chapéus de chuva em Águeda

Uma belíssima instalação de chapéus de chuva coloridos na rua Luís de Camões em Águeda. A rua foi totalmente decorada com chapéus de chuva suspensos dando a ilusão que estavam a flutuar. Imagens captadas pela fotógrafa Patricia Almeida.

Pintar com café

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artworks-with-coffee-cups6

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PencilHead

Animação russa totalmente feita à mão, será? Sim é possível.

PencilHead

Future Proof – o poder da dança

Henrik Adamsen

 

Conheça o trabalho de Henrik Adamsen

Lil Buck and Yo-Yo Ma

no comments, just enjoy!

BBC News – Audio slideshow: Human Planet