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Evan Roth: Internet Landscapes

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    Angel: Our speaker today is Evan Roth.
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    He's a multi-disciplinary American artist
    based in Paris.
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    He's working with sculptures, prints,
    videos and websites
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    and in the upcoming hour during his talk
    he'll take you on a journey about art,
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    politics, culture,
    the misuse of communication technologies
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    and how all of these are connected
    to each other.
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    Please give a warm round of applause
    for Evan Roth, our speaker today!
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    Thank you very much!
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    Applause
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    Evan: Hi everybody, thanks so much for coming,
    I'm really humbled and honoured to be here.
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    It's my first time on this side of the internet
    with you all, so thanks so much for joining.
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    Ya, my name is Evan. I'm an American,
    I'm living in Paris at the moment.
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    I'm an artist, and so I'm gonna talk a bit
    about the art I've been making the last few
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    years,
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    how it's changed as the internet's changed,
    and hopefully weave some threads through here.
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    The work I'm making primarily shows up
    in these three areas of the gallery,
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    public space and the internet.
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    The mediums I'm using are often quite different,
    but historically the work I've been making
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    has been connected by this relationship
    between misuse and empowerment,
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    and how misuse can kind of be this lens
    that we, as we all know, look at technologies
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    but lots of things in life around us
    is sort of see things that have other
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    sort of unintended uses, right.
    Female voice in bg: Introducing the iRobot
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    robot..
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    Evan: To make things, like consumer domestic
    products much more interesting, right,
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    so this is the doomba,
    this old old internet meme, right,
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    laughter
    but, so good, right,
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    such a wonderful gift that the internet gave
    us
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    with the doomba,
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    like I can't wait until.. I really feel like
    this
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    should be in the permanent collection
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    of the Museum of Modern Arts,
    this is one of my favourite sculptures
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    I've seen in the last few years.
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    But for me, I tried to have like doomba vision
    when I'm doing activism
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    or when I'm doing art
    and thinking about like
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    what else can I ducttape knifes onto
    to make it more interesting than it was
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    the way the manufacturer sort of
    er, advertised it to me, right?
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    Ahm, and so that's kind of a main inspiration
    for a lot of the art work that I look at,
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    that I'm a fan of
    and that I'm trying to make in my own practice.
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    And so two maybe more specific themes
    I'm gonna try to show through different projects
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    are 1) this idea of technological empowerment,
    which is part of the reason I became an artist,
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    and the other this idea of visualisation
    through misuse.
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    And my kind of .. my history with technological
    empowerment went back to the ..
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    when I was an architect.
    I was at university and I was..
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    I had one class about computers,
    that my dad sort of forced me to take,
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    and I didn't think
    it was that interesting.
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    This was back when I was literally still doing,
    like, graphite with a straight edge on vellum,
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    right?
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    This was like the first class where they're
    gonna
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    do things like 3D modelling on Autocad,
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    and there was one week about the internet.
    And I had like this really vivid memory
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    where the professor brought up
    this fetch window on an old Mac,
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    and like edited it in a little text document
    and dragged it in and the dog
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    ran it up to the internet and then
    he'd refresh on the browser
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    and it updated.
    And of course this is like small news now,
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    but for me this was huge.
    I couldn't believe it,
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    like I really just couldn't believe
    that for free I could say anything to anybody
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    and nobody could really censor it.
    It just seemed like it was too good to be
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    true.
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    And that was kind of the death
    knell on my architectural career.
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    Like I would go on to graduate
    and work for a couple of years,
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    but very quickly I was falling in love
    with the internet in the early kind-of-like
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    flash days,
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    remember, that time was really fun.
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    And so I was coming home from
    my architecture job and sort of trying to
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    learn code
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    and trying .. kind of had my first introduction
    to open source,
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    like reading Joshua Davis' praystation FLA
    files,
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    if anybody remembers that day.
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    But that was kind of my introduction to technology,
    and it was really empowering,
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    like, it was a feeling, that I still remember
    and try to, like, hone in on
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    when I'm getting more depressed these days.
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    And so, how this shows up in some of my work,
    I'm gonna start around, like, 2005
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    with some projects that I've been doing
    up to projects that I've been doing right
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    now.
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    Back in 2005/2006 I co-founded an organisation
    called Graffiti Reseach Lab
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    with a friend named James Powderly,
    while we were in residency at IBM in New York.
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    And the basic idea we had with
    Graffiti Research Lab was that
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    technologies were getting a lot cheaper
    to the point where they're almost getting
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    disposable,
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    like LEDs, digital projectors were getting
    really cheap, lasers were getting really cheap,
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    and we were interested in trying to make projects
    that would start to get graffiti writers and
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    activists
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    talking to the
    free software movement more.
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    Like have a common dialogue for
    these two very different groups of toolbuilders.
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    And so, with that as, like, a premise,
    we sort of thought of ourselves
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    as the Q branch for graffiti writers, right?
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    I'll just show one quick project.
    This was called 'Laser Tag'.
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    This was a in retrospect very simple
    computer vision project,
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    but we would basically go out with
    a digital projector
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    and we'd invite activists and
    we'd invite graffiti writers,
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    and we'd set up on this sort of
    biggest buildings that we could find in town.
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    And we would just have this kind of open system,
    like, the only rules that we had with the
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    project
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    was that there couldn't be a censor button.
    People had to be allowed to say
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    whatever they wanted.
    Most of the times we did it without permission,
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    which isn't saying much because
    at the time there wasn't a lot of people
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    projecting in public so there weren't a lot
    of
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    sort of laws in this sort of grey area.
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    So even when the police usually came
    it was more of a conversation than a ticket.
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    And so we were making,
    this is one example of lots of projects
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    we were making where it was kind of about
    amplifying free speech,
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    like trying to use technologies
    that were getting cheaper and cheaper and
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    cheaper
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    to level that playing field between people
    who live in cities and people who advertise
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    in cities,
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    and what kind of visual language
    and visual communication we have in both those
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    places.
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    So that was the work Graffiti Research Lab
    was doing.
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    At some point we realized with Graffiti Research
    Lab
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    that the sort of technical hacking we were
    doing
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    was much less interesting than the
    more social hacking we were doing.
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    And we also, we were getting much more
    press than we deserved,
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    and we were trying to figure out
    why that was happening,
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    and one thing we sorta came to was
    we were sorta fulfilling this narrative
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    that the media wants, which is
    that we are living in the future now, right?
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    Which is why everyone is reporting on
    hoverboards now, like, ???
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    we're here, you know?
    And graffiti writers with lasers
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    was one of those apparently, like,
    monumental future points that we'd hit,
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    and so the media was trying to write
    about our projects,
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    and we realized that this was sort of
    a social hack where we could start to
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    empower other people with maybe
    more marginalized voices
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    to get in the newspapers more often.
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    And so, our mission changed slightly,
    and so we kind of morphed the energy that
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    we had
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    with Graffiti Research Lab into this group
    called the Free Art and Technology Lab,
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    which didn't really have a sort of
    set code or manifesto,
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    but the basic idea was that we were gonna
    use what even Franco called radical entertainment,
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    This idea that you could make sort of engaging
    media on the internet
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    that people are gonna want to click on,
    not because they agree with the politics,
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    because they wanna see people
    acting a fool in the streets, right?
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    So I'll show, I'll show one project here.
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    This was from a suite of projects
    we did in Berlin, gosh, a few years ago now,
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    called 'Fuck Google', where we came together
    to make Fuck Google projects.
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    So this was one where we rented a..
    actually, Aram Bartholl was over here,
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    you can see him seated there in the driver's
    seat,
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    rented this car for very cheap,
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    bought a roof rack off of ebay i think,
    for, like, 15 Euros,
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    and then everything above the roof
    was just cardboard, ducttape and wires.
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    There was nothing technical in this project,
    it was purely a social hack.
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    And this was probably my second greatest
    technological empowering moment.
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    Driving the google car is fucking amazing.
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    Here is what that looks like.
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    music
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    laughter
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    So once we had the car,
    we were just brainstorming,
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    like, what are the little skits we could
    play out, that would kind of put google
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    in a compromised position.
    And so, yeah, it was breaking down.
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    This is the drinking and driving.
    Laughter
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    applause
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    And if you wanna know how strong google's
    brand is, this is a staged carjacking,
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    where someone off the street
    risks their life to save a corporate automobile
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    engaged in spying practices.
    Laughter
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    And so the idea is that we were then leaking
    these on the internet and
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    this was a long time ago back when
    we were not sure if google was evil or not,
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    right?
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    So this discussion was happening.
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    It's happening more in Germany than in
    other places, actually.
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    But the idea was to get those conversations
    happening outside of places like this,
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    and outside of places like our gallery
    and art institutions and more in, like,
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    the mainstream press,
    and, like, people over coffee
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    picking up this story
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    and starting to talk about these issues.
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    That was kind of the idea behind
    F.A.T. Lab function.
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    I was also maintaining a solo practice
    at the same time as I was doing these
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    more collaborative projects.
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    This is one called 'Free Speech' I did
    in Vienna in 2000.. I don't know, like 3 or
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    4 years ago now?
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    This is again, like, a very simple technology,
    this is another rented car with vinyl letters
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    of a mobile phone number, mobile Viennese
    phone number,
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    and an arrow pointing to a loudspeaker
    on the roof.
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    And that's the only input you get
    as the viewer.
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    And we just drove this around Vienna
    for three days,
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    and people that were sort of curious
    enough to call that would have their phone
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    routed directly to the speaker,
    and there was noone on the other line,
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    so their first realisation that they were
    sort of in the system when they would just
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    hear themselves, like,
    'Hello?' echoing throughout the streets.
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    I'll show a bit of that that looks like.
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    noise
    Female voice: Hallo? Hallo!
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    Ich bin der Champion!
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    Male voice: Laughter
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    noise
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    Children: Hallo! Fick dich!
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    Male voice: Laura! Ich liebe dich!
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    Music
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    Group voices: Hallo? Niiiiice!
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    So fresh, man. TschĂś.
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    Evan: And so, like, that guy was maybe my
    favourite,
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    or maybe that guy who picked up
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    and just started laughing,
    even though when confronted
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    with this sort of
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    louder voice in public, and they were..
    maybe thought that were gonna have,
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    when they set out, commute to work or
    go to coffee,
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    even though maybe they didn't choose
    to say these more poignant points, you know?
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    Maybe just the laughter to me was this
    more pure feeling of what technological
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    empowerment feels like, right, like
    just laughing on the streets
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    because you kind of have
    this empowered voice.
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    Like, that, that's the feeling I wanna
    get as an artist and so,
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    some of the work I was doing was trying
    to sort of set up, set up these systems
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    that would allow other people
    to have these sort of experiences.
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    So again, like very simple tools for
    empowerment,
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    very low-tech tools for empowerment.
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    The other thread that I was doing throughout
    that period and maybe more so
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    in the last 3 years
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    has to do with sort of this idea of visualizing
    the invisible
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    which I think is something that artists wrestle
    with quite a bit.
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    And specifically thinking about visualizing
    the network,
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    thinking about visualizing the internet
    and how the internet is sort of touching us
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    and we have this new connection culturally
    to each other.
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    And so I did.. this was maybe 3 or 4 years
    ago,
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    I did this sort of homage to wikipedia.
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    I still love surfing wikipedia.
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    For me as someone who sort of maybe has
    a bit of nostalgia for the old days of the
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    internet,
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    I feel like wikipedia is one of these
    few holdouts on the internet
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    where there is semi-egoless uploads
    still happening.
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    You know?
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    It's not necessarily...
    people are making uploads not because
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    they're trying to craft their own avatar online,
    but they.. because they really want to explain
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    how a doroknot (?) functions,
    or they really want to explain
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    how a boxer engine works, right,
    it's content that if Konstant were here
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    he would call media with an alibi, right?
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    It's media that has reason for existing
    beyond just sort of supporting our own
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    online visions of who we are
    and who we aren't.
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    And so for this reason I really
    love wikipedia.
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    It feels like this really sort of
    free and honest place to surf sometimes.
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    And so, I made this series of eleven websites,
    kind of as a monument to wikipedia,
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    where I spent a summer just surfing
    for animated GIFs on wikipedia
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    which was a really awesome way
    to spend the summer.
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    And then, when I found ones that
    I would wanna kind of use as raw materials
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    I would just copy and paste it
    a couple of hundred times
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    and rename the files so
    that when the browser tries to load it in
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    it doesn't cache them all immediately.
    It thinks they're all separate files.
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    And so what ends up happening
    is..
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    And of course, it can't load them
    all at once, right,
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    so it just starts loading them in
    as the packets are sort of delivered
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    in this linear fashion, and..
    so the pieces never quite look the same.
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    They're all...
    in a sense these kind of unique views
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    were depending on your process,
    your speed and what browser you're using
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    and how fast your internet connection is.
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    They're always gonna load in slightly different
    as the packets sort of traverse the network
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    in this linear fashion.
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    And so what you get is.. are these compositions
    that are very simple
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    but they're not, in this case,
    like a perfect circle, right?
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    You kind of see this visualization
    of the data kind of as it's going
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    through the network.
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    And if you view these same pieces
    in the TOR browser,
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    which I don't have to explain
    what it is in this audience,
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    which is really fun for the first time,
    laughing
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    you get get a sense of how...
    so this is the exact same website
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    just viewed through TOR.
    And you can see in the piece
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    how the composition is altered, right,
    because, as the pieces are moving around
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    and it's being rerouted to different nodes,
    they kind of come back together
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    in a way that's very different
    than the way it's happening
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    as a straight connection
    through Firefox, and so
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    the resulting composition is less fluid,
    it's more staggered and you can kind of..
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    There is some kind of visual clue
    of how that piece went through the network.
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    Another series I've been doing
    for several years now is..
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    I've been archiving my own browsing folder,
    my cache directory,
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    I've been basically archiving that
    every couple of weeks.
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    And then when I get invited to show a piece
    from that series I just basically..
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    I use a image packing algorithm,
    so just pack all these images
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    into the smallest amount of room possible,
    and I'll make these prints
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    that are just straight print-outs of
    my internet cache.
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    So this is what one month
    of my internet cache looks like.
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    That is what 3 months looks like.
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    They're relatively uncensored.
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    I go through it to look and make sure,
    'cause sometimes my wife will use the computer,
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    I'll make sure there is nothing of hers
    she doesn't want on there,
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    and I check it for banking details,
    but besides that it's pretty..
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    pretty much uncensored.
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    And so, it's meant to be..
    I kind of think of them as self portraits.
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    They're.. I think of them actually more
    like false self portraits,
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    'cause it's.. unless you truly think
    that you are your browsing data,
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    it's not.. it does.. it's..
    these prints aren't who I feel like I am.
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    But in.. I think over the long term
    the idea is more they are meant
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    to be this sort of portrait of the internet
    at this one moment in time, right?
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    And as sort of screen size has changed
    and screens shift from our laps to our pockets,
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    and as browser resolutions
    and all these standards change,
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    and the kind of fabric
    of the web changes,
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    and these prints hopefully,
    when someone digs out of my basement,
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    like, 20 years from now,
    they'll have these sort of prints
  • 16:11 - 16:13
    of what the internet felt like
    in this one moment in time.
  • 16:13 - 16:16
    That's the idea anyway.
  • 16:16 - 16:21
    Another related series has to do
    again with this kind of shift from
  • 16:21 - 16:22
    the screen to the pocket.
  • 16:22 - 16:25
    Like, I'm really sort of fascinated
    with this idea of casual computing
  • 16:25 - 16:27
    which I feel..
    I feel like that move when we started
  • 16:27 - 16:31
    having computers in our pockets
    every day was a really fundamental shift.
  • 16:31 - 16:33
    And so I had this series called
    'Multi-touch Paintings',
  • 16:33 - 16:37
    that are created just from,
    basically just take a piece of tracing paper
  • 16:37 - 16:41
    and put it over my phone and then
    perform the sort of interface tasks
  • 16:41 - 16:42
    that it asked me to do.
  • 16:42 - 16:46
    So this one's called
    'Slide to unlock'.
  • 16:46 - 16:49
    This is a.. this one's called
    'Zoom in, zoom out'.
  • 16:49 - 16:51
    And they're literally just ink on paper.
  • 16:51 - 16:54
    So the capacitive touch still works
    through the paper
  • 16:54 - 16:58
    and it's.. I'm kind of like a,
    maybe a short term it's meant to be,
  • 16:58 - 17:01
    maybe purely a visualization
    in a sense.
  • 17:01 - 17:04
    But I think maybe..
    I hope that there's more, there is also
  • 17:04 - 17:07
    like kind of an artistic side of these too,
    where they're also kind of commenting
  • 17:07 - 17:09
    on the way we're consuming media
    right now.
  • 17:09 - 17:11
    So this one's called
    'Next next next', right?
  • 17:11 - 17:14
    So this is..
    and 'next next next' is the way
  • 17:14 - 17:17
    probably this piece will be consumed
    in 99% of the time, right?
  • 17:17 - 17:19
    For the 10 people that see this
    hanging on a wall,
  • 17:19 - 17:22
    the rest are just gonna 'next'
    through this on instagram, right?
  • 17:22 - 17:27
    And so it's meant to sort of,
    kind of archive, like, the bug in amber
  • 17:27 - 17:29
    a little bit, these moments that
    we're going through right now,
  • 17:29 - 17:31
    where we're touching pixels
    for the first time,
  • 17:31 - 17:36
    and these things that kind of feel,
    sort of high-tech in a sense,
  • 17:36 - 17:38
    but quickly are feeling very blunt,
    like to me this feels like
  • 17:38 - 17:42
    a very blunt way to consume media,
    a very blunt way to have a relationship
  • 17:42 - 17:44
    with art.
  • 17:44 - 17:48
    So hopefully it's commenting
    on that a bit too.
  • 17:48 - 17:50
    This is a related piece from the series.
  • 17:50 - 17:52
    This is.. this piece is called 'Level Cleared'.
  • 17:52 - 17:56
    This is me playing Angry Birds
    from start to finish.
  • 17:56 - 17:57
    Laughing And so..
    Applause
  • 17:57 - 18:07
    So the grid starts in the upper left corner
    with level 1-1.
  • 18:07 - 18:11
    Whoever else has a Angry.. or had
    at one point an Angry Birds addiction,
  • 18:11 - 18:13
    you know the level well.
  • 18:13 - 18:14
    And then I just played straight through.
  • 18:14 - 18:17
    It takes me full-time Angry Birds play,
    like 8-10 hours a day for 3 days
  • 18:17 - 18:18
    to get through.
  • 18:18 - 18:21
    And they keep adding levels,
    so when I have to remake the piece now
  • 18:21 - 18:23
    it's even more of a nightmare.
  • 18:23 - 18:24
    And it just marches straight through.
  • 18:24 - 18:29
    I have one sheet per level..
    per attempted level,
  • 18:29 - 18:31
    and so again, this piece, like,
    I've been thinking a lot about
  • 18:31 - 18:35
    how the art.. how art and the internet
    relate in terms of the consumption of art
  • 18:35 - 18:39
    and how time is affected with
    our consumption of art.
  • 18:39 - 18:43
    And I was, actually, I was thinking about
    conversations we had earlier
  • 18:43 - 18:43
    on the F.A.T. days
  • 18:43 - 18:47
    where we were both kind of joking at one point
    about how we felt like the internet was
  • 18:47 - 18:50
    sort of.. we always had to load projects up,
    like, if we didn't release something in 2
  • 18:50 - 18:51
    weeks,
  • 18:51 - 18:52
    it was like we were
    dead on the internet, right?
  • 18:52 - 18:54
    And we felt this kind of like push
    from the internet
  • 18:54 - 18:57
    that we had to keep making and
    keep making and keep making.
  • 18:57 - 18:59
    And there was something interesting about
    participating in that culture,
  • 18:59 - 19:01
    but then more and more
    I've been thinking about
  • 19:01 - 19:04
    how can you maybe still contribute
    and participate in that kind of consumption
  • 19:04 - 19:05
    of media,
  • 19:05 - 19:08
    but then have the same piece
    mean something slightly different
  • 19:08 - 19:11
    for people that are gonna invest
    more amounts of time in it, right?
  • 19:11 - 19:15
    And how pieces, even if people consume it
    in a blog post title and have one reaction,
  • 19:15 - 19:18
    which might be a familiar reaction
    like laughter,
  • 19:18 - 19:20
    which I actually really like
    from this piece.
  • 19:20 - 19:24
    I'm trying to embed in these
    other kind of readings of the work,
  • 19:24 - 19:26
    where you come in and you sit
    on this bench, right,
  • 19:26 - 19:30
    and this is maybe my interpretation
    of the piece, right,
  • 19:30 - 19:34
    and you sit in front of these, like
    1500 sheets of paper
  • 19:34 - 19:36
    and after the kind of wave of laughter
    leaves you and you realize
  • 19:36 - 19:39
    like, all the things I could have done
    at that time, right?
  • 19:39 - 19:42
    Like, I coulda learned French,
    I coulda lost ten pounds,
  • 19:42 - 19:46
    I coulda learned how to cook more,
    I could've read a whole bunch of books,
  • 19:46 - 19:49
    and instead I was like just flicking,
    like, birds at pigs
  • 19:49 - 19:51
    over and over and over and over again.
  • 19:51 - 19:54
    And so it's.. I like both readings.
  • 19:54 - 19:58
    Like, I like the reading that..
    it can be consumed in Instagram quickly.
  • 19:58 - 20:01
    I like the reading..
    I.. if people are able to sit with it
  • 20:01 - 20:05
    and maybe contemplate these larger issues
    I like it as well, but I think
  • 20:05 - 20:09
    in art-making right now there is this..
    I'm trying to make work that isn't
  • 20:09 - 20:12
    just addressing the internet's drive
    to have things faster and quicker
  • 20:12 - 20:14
    and in blogpost titles, right?
  • 20:14 - 20:19
    'Cause I felt it sort of affected
    the art I was making.
  • 20:19 - 20:22
    And also the internet has like
    fundamentally changed, right,
  • 20:22 - 20:27
    like I think.. I think the times
    that we were at IBM and
  • 20:27 - 20:29
    we were doing F.A.T. Lab
    and the times that we were
  • 20:29 - 20:32
    sort of wrestling with that work -
    things really changed, like,
  • 20:32 - 20:33
    we all felt it.
  • 20:33 - 20:35
    And in this crowd I don't
    really have to talk about it, right?
  • 20:35 - 20:40
    But for a while, the internet to me
    felt like this, and shame on me, you know?
  • 20:40 - 20:43
    But as I've been making work and
    the work's been changing,
  • 20:43 - 20:47
    and my relationship to the internet
    has been changing,
  • 20:47 - 20:49
    and so I'm gonna into some things
    that I know you all know,
  • 20:49 - 20:52
    but this is kind of like my personal take
    on it, right?
  • 20:52 - 20:55
    My.. this is like how I came to think
    about the situation that we're in now.
  • 20:55 - 20:57
    I used to think the internet
    was the Big Bang, right?
  • 20:57 - 20:59
    That was how I was introduced to it.
  • 20:59 - 21:01
    Like, I thought, holy shit, this is
    gonna happen
  • 21:01 - 21:03
    and it's just gonna keep multiplying,
    getting bigger and bigger
  • 21:03 - 21:06
    and there'll be a server for every interest,
    and everybody'll be a publisher,
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    everyone's gonna be empowered.
  • 21:08 - 21:11
    And I thought it was this
    Big Bang model of what was gonna happen.
  • 21:11 - 21:14
    And I think more and more that, like,
    it's actually the Big Crunch model,
  • 21:14 - 21:17
    which is when the universe expands
    to a maximization point
  • 21:17 - 21:19
    and then at some point starts
    contracting down, right?
  • 21:19 - 21:23
    And I think, I think that that middle point..
    I think that middle point was when
  • 21:23 - 21:24
    we accepted Gmail.
    Laughter
  • 21:24 - 21:30
    You know, I think once we, like,
    culturally decided that
  • 21:30 - 21:33
    someone could read our emails
    and advertise us to our inbox,
  • 21:33 - 21:36
    I really think people at Google
    were just like, holy shit, like,
  • 21:36 - 21:39
    'They bought it.'
    Like, from that point on it was just really
  • 21:39 - 21:39
    over.
  • 21:39 - 21:43
    And so now it's been of course
    condensing into fewer and fewer servers,
  • 21:43 - 21:46
    and.. anyway, we all know this stuff, right.
  • 21:46 - 21:50
    And so this kind of like, this condensation
    of the internet down to one point
  • 21:50 - 21:53
    feels like it's happening.
  • 21:53 - 21:55
    The kind of targeted marketing
    that just was annoying at one point
  • 21:55 - 21:59
    now feels really more sinister, like,
    I mean, it was kind of ok
  • 21:59 - 22:01
    to read our email and
    advertise to us,
  • 22:01 - 22:03
    but then when you start, like,
    kind of snitching on us,
  • 22:03 - 22:06
    that was just.. that was hard for me.
  • 22:06 - 22:09
    Like, we don't even need to talk about this,
    'cause I know it gets addressed all the time
  • 22:09 - 22:09
    here.
  • 22:09 - 22:13
    But for me, as someone who is making art
    that was engaged in the internet,
  • 22:13 - 22:17
    and a lot of the inspirations that I was taking
    for, from the kind of free culture movement
  • 22:17 - 22:21
    and free software movement,
    engaged with the internet, and like,
  • 22:21 - 22:24
    the convolution of these 3 things, of like,
    monetization of the web,
  • 22:24 - 22:27
    the centralization of the web,
    and then this kind of spying scandal.
  • 22:27 - 22:31
    They really left me in kind of like staggering
    for ways to get back to making art
  • 22:31 - 22:35
    about an internet that didn't feel
    funny to me any more, right, like,
  • 22:35 - 22:37
    the internet was ..
    this is how I felt like.
  • 22:37 - 22:40
    I felt like the lolcats were just
    this Trojan horse, you know,
  • 22:40 - 22:44
    and, and I.. after all this was sort of happening
    I couldn't even see the cats
  • 22:44 - 22:45
    on the internet any more.
  • 22:45 - 22:48
    Like, I thought, the internet was
    the land of the cats and unicorns,
  • 22:48 - 22:53
    and now, the fur has kind of been removed
    and you see the terminator's shiny skull
  • 22:53 - 22:56
    and the red beady eye.
  • 22:56 - 22:59
    And so if.. and just like from a personal
    standpoint it got hard
  • 22:59 - 23:03
    to get interested in making art
    in that medium again.
  • 23:03 - 23:07
    And so, that was like all leading up
    to this talk,
  • 23:07 - 23:10
    which maybe a lot of you
    have seen either at transmediale last year,
  • 23:10 - 23:13
    or here, or, I mean, around the internet.
  • 23:13 - 23:15
    I thought it was in the internet
    for a second there.
  • 23:15 - 23:19
    This was Peter's talk at transmediale,
    where he gets on stage
  • 23:19 - 23:21
    and he basically says
    'We've lost, and it's over.'
  • 23:21 - 23:27
    which is something I know that
    we've heard here from Frank and Rop
  • 23:27 - 23:28
    10 years ago, right.
  • 23:28 - 23:29
    I know this isn't a new narrative.
  • 23:29 - 23:33
    But for me, Peter's talk came along
    kind of at the right time,
  • 23:33 - 23:37
    where.. like, the Pirate Bay, for me,
    and the work that Piratbyran had been
  • 23:37 - 23:38
    doing,
  • 23:38 - 23:42
    has been really one of my main, like,
    heroes, one of the main reasons
  • 23:42 - 23:43
    I started making art.
  • 23:43 - 23:47
    Like, the Pirate Bay for me is still,
    I think, one of the most amazing things made
  • 23:47 - 23:48
    during my lifetime.
  • 23:48 - 23:52
    And it was what really turned me,
    kind of, from architecture to thinking about
  • 23:52 - 23:54
    how entertainment and activism
    could overlap,
  • 23:54 - 23:56
    and how people could really
    change things
  • 23:56 - 24:00
    and have kind of powerstructure-altering
    things that we could contribute
  • 24:00 - 24:01
    to culture.
  • 24:01 - 24:03
    And when you have these kind of
    personal heroes get on stage
  • 24:03 - 24:06
    and tell you that that's over..
  • 24:06 - 24:09
    When I happy to hear that
    I had this kind of moment where I was like,
  • 24:09 - 24:12
    why am I feeling happy about
    hearing that, you know?
  • 24:12 - 24:13
    And I realized that that was kind
    of how I was feeling,
  • 24:13 - 24:18
    and have somebody else say that..
    it felt really.. good's the wrong word,
  • 24:18 - 24:22
    but it felt.. strangely empowering
    to sort of start to admit to myself
  • 24:22 - 24:26
    that maybe the kind of ship
    was sinking, right?
  • 24:26 - 24:31
    And so, shortly after that we were also having
    conversations within the F.A.T. Lab internally,
  • 24:31 - 24:34
    and, not by unanimous decision
    but by majority we decided
  • 24:34 - 24:37
    that we were gonna shut the doors
    at F.A.T. Lab.
  • 24:37 - 24:40
    And I won't speak for the group,
    but my.. my personal thoughts on why
  • 24:40 - 24:44
    we.. they shut down, which maybe
    isn't important in the greater sense,
  • 24:44 - 24:47
    but just, kind of again, like as
    a.. kind of my personal take
  • 24:47 - 24:51
    on how I'm working through this stuff
    was like.. I felt like F.A.T. Lab..
  • 24:51 - 24:53
    like the internet had sort of
    outpaced us, like,
  • 24:53 - 24:57
    that idea of radical entertainment
    had a moment when there was
  • 24:57 - 25:01
    a loophole in the media where
    kind of companies and capitalism
  • 25:01 - 25:02
    hadn't really figured out viral
    marketing yet,
  • 25:02 - 25:06
    and we had this.. this like big opening
    where we could really speak to people
  • 25:06 - 25:09
    on a larger platform because
    there weren't whole divisions
  • 25:09 - 25:12
    at Wieden+Kennedy that were just
    trying to do this for the largest companies.
  • 25:12 - 25:15
    Like, it was.. we figured that out first,
    and so we had this kind of weakness
  • 25:15 - 25:17
    that we could exploit.
  • 25:17 - 25:20
    But as that changed we kind of failed
    as a group, I think, to keep up
  • 25:20 - 25:23
    with new modes of activism.
  • 25:23 - 25:25
    And the other thing that I was sort of
    feeling was that we were kind of
  • 25:25 - 25:30
    providing this David and Goliath
    narrative to people.
  • 25:30 - 25:34
    Both within the group, they were
    getting closer to sort of Silicon Valley,
  • 25:34 - 25:37
    and our audience, which I felt like
    was getting closer and closer to Silicon Valley,
  • 25:37 - 25:40
    that like... people that were getting
    entrenched more into that way of thinking
  • 25:40 - 25:44
    were looking and enjoying our content
    in a way that sort of felt uncomfortable in
  • 25:44 - 25:45
    a way.
  • 25:45 - 25:50
    And it felt like the kind of humorous pranks
    that we were pulling was helping them cope,
  • 25:50 - 25:54
    in a way, with the fact that they were
    supporting that system.
  • 25:54 - 25:57
    And... it kind of felt like we were
    the comedian on the Titanic,
  • 25:57 - 25:59
    like telling jokes as it was sinking.
  • 25:59 - 26:01
    Or, it felt to me that way.
  • 26:01 - 26:05
    And so at some point it felt
    more powerful to kind of just say
  • 26:05 - 26:08
    'Goodbye' and maybe put a message
    in a bottle and jump off the ship
  • 26:08 - 26:12
    rather than sit there and keep
    bailing out the ship, right?
  • 26:12 - 26:16
    And so that's where I was
    at the beginning of this year.
  • 26:16 - 26:18
    And so the work that I'm gonna show
    from this point on,
  • 26:18 - 26:22
    which I think I still have.. yeah, ok,
    25 minutes or so,
  • 26:22 - 26:24
    is kind of the work I've been doing
    to try to get back to that point
  • 26:24 - 26:29
    that I had when I first saw FETCH
    and FTP and kind of understood,
  • 26:29 - 26:31
    in a very rudimentary way,
    how the internet functions,
  • 26:31 - 26:33
    and what that empowering
    moment felt like,
  • 26:33 - 26:36
    and trying to struggle to get back
    to a point where I could make art
  • 26:36 - 26:38
    that was engaged in the internet again.
  • 26:38 - 26:41
    And so, one way.. one way I started
    that search was to sort of start
  • 26:41 - 26:45
    from the beginning, and thinking about,
    like, what is our cultural conception
  • 26:45 - 26:46
    of what the internet is,
    what it looks like.
  • 26:46 - 26:50
    And we have generally a kind of
    very poor visual metaphor
  • 26:50 - 26:51
    for what the internet is, right?
  • 26:51 - 26:53
    So this is just a google image search
    for the word 'internet'
  • 26:53 - 26:56
    which doesn't, to me,
    feel very representative
  • 26:56 - 26:59
    of what the network is
    or what it feels like.
  • 26:59 - 27:02
    And so I started to get more
    into thinking about
  • 27:02 - 27:05
    what it was, like,
    it can't just be, you know,
  • 27:05 - 27:08
    blue-glowing logos in clouds,
    it has to be something physical.
  • 27:08 - 27:12
    And so I started reading Andrew Blum's
    book 'Tubes'.
  • 27:12 - 27:16
    I started reading Neal Stephenson's
    'Mother Earth Mother Board',
  • 27:16 - 27:19
    which, if there is any sort of internet
    infrastructure nerds,
  • 27:19 - 27:20
    is like an amazing primer,
  • 27:20 - 27:23
    kind of the first maybe seminal texts
    about following internet cables
  • 27:23 - 27:26
    around the globe,
    which is kind of understanding
  • 27:26 - 27:30
    what it looks like in these moments
    of transition, when it sort of
  • 27:30 - 27:33
    enters the water and reaches the land.
  • 27:33 - 27:36
    And one thing that Andrew Blum
    talks about in his book is this idea
  • 27:36 - 27:41
    of these kind of like.. there's no
    monuments for this thing that's really
  • 27:41 - 27:43
    a major part of our sort of time
    here on Earth,
  • 27:43 - 27:45
    and maybe our part of culture.
  • 27:45 - 27:47
    It seems like there's not
    these places that we can kind of
  • 27:47 - 27:49
    go visit and commune with
    in the same way there are other
  • 27:49 - 27:50
    architectural landmarks.
  • 27:50 - 27:54
    And so you get these kind of like
    lonely manhole covers
  • 27:54 - 27:59
    on these very desolate beaches
    in Nova Scotia.
  • 27:59 - 28:03
    And so, at the same time that
    I was sort of doing that research,
  • 28:03 - 28:07
    and this is gonna sound like a big
    left turn, but I'm gonna pull it back,
  • 28:07 - 28:09
    at the same time I was doing
    that research I was also working
  • 28:09 - 28:13
    on another project that required
    the use of an infra-red camera.
  • 28:13 - 28:15
    And so I was kind of spending my time
    doing this research and looking
  • 28:15 - 28:18
    around the internet trying to find
    really cheap infra-red cameras,
  • 28:18 - 28:20
    'cause of course I'm an artist
    and I'm broke,
  • 28:20 - 28:24
    and I kept finding myself on these
    websites of people selling technology
  • 28:24 - 28:28
    to ghost hunters, which is a community
    that I had no interactions with,
  • 28:28 - 28:33
    no experience of, but they just had
    really good cheap infra-red cameras.
  • 28:33 - 28:34
    laughter
  • 28:34 - 28:37
    And I was like, I was sitting there
    in these online ghost hunting shops,
  • 28:37 - 28:38
    and they were amazing.
  • 28:38 - 28:41
    Like, I felt myself having one of those
    moments with technology,
  • 28:41 - 28:45
    where.. that I hadn't felt in a long time,
    it was just like a kid.
  • 28:45 - 28:47
    Like, looking at this technology,
    I mean, like 'What the fuck is this,
  • 28:47 - 28:51
    like, why, I don't understand!'
    and they..
  • 28:51 - 28:54
    But then I started to get interested in it
    more on
  • 28:54 - 28:56
    kind of like a metaphorical or conceptual
    level,
  • 28:56 - 28:58
    'cause what the ghost hunter..
    ghost hunting community was..
  • 28:58 - 29:02
    is kind of interested in doing is, they're..
    they talk about disembodied human energy
  • 29:02 - 29:02
    a lot,
  • 29:02 - 29:06
    and so they're making tech to try to
    visualize disembodied human energy.
  • 29:06 - 29:09
    And in a sense this felt like what I was
    trying to do with a lot of the work
  • 29:09 - 29:13
    that I was doing, which was trying
    to take all this kind of invisible momentum
  • 29:13 - 29:15
    that's getting stored in servers and
    going through the fibre-optic cables
  • 29:15 - 29:19
    and thinking about ways to kind of visualize
    that work to come to some understanding
  • 29:19 - 29:20
    of it.
  • 29:20 - 29:23
    And the ghost hunting community had this
    amazing tech to do that with.
  • 29:23 - 29:27
    And so then I started to go really deep
    down this ghost hunting rabbit hole,
  • 29:27 - 29:30
    which was another fun way to spend
    three months on the internet. laughing
  • 29:30 - 29:35
    I'll show just one clip.. 'cause I'd
    never seen any of this,
  • 29:35 - 29:36
    so people that are familiar with
    these communities, this is
  • 29:36 - 29:39
    maybe old hat, but to me this
    was like just fascinating.
  • 29:39 - 29:42
    So this is.. they also come from where
    I come from, so this is like,
  • 29:42 - 29:46
    the Mid-West Spirit Organisation,
    like they're all from the midwest
  • 29:46 - 29:47
    in the US, right?
  • 29:47 - 29:50
    'Cause it's super boring there and
    so apparently like.. laughing
  • 29:50 - 29:53
    you either do drugs or you
    hunt for ghosts, and.. laughing
  • 29:53 - 29:56
    so this is one from the Mid-West
    Spirit Group, and this is one of
  • 29:56 - 29:58
    many many clips on youtube.
  • 29:58 - 30:02
    So this is a video shot in full-spectrum
    camera, which is just a camera
  • 30:02 - 30:04
    that has been modified you see
    a little bit more of the ultra-violet spectrum
  • 30:04 - 30:07
    and a little bit more of the infrared
    spectrum, and the audio you're gonna hear
  • 30:07 - 30:11
    is from what they call a spirit box,
    which is essentially a hacked radio,
  • 30:11 - 30:12
    that just keeps scanning,
  • 30:12 - 30:14
    and I'll talk more about that in a bit.
  • 30:14 - 30:22
    Guy: This is a device that you guys
    can come forward any spirits and speak with
  • 30:22 - 30:22
    me. (??)
  • 30:22 - 30:49
    Ah, so, if you have a message, please
    come forward and speak to me into this device.
  • 30:49 - 30:50
    noise
    Female voice: Hi.
    Guy: Hi, tell me your name.
    noise
    noiseboop
    noiseboopnoise
  • 30:50 - 30:52
    Evan: Ok, I'll let you do your own
    youtube searching for that.
  • 30:52 - 30:55
    But even that idea, like, if you have
    a message for me, come speak into this device,
  • 30:55 - 30:57
    like, I wanna use that for like the title
    of
  • 30:57 - 30:59
    my next solo show, to me it's like sooo...
  • 30:59 - 31:02
    there is like something happening there
    that seems like a statement that
  • 31:02 - 31:03
    is greater than the ghost hunting
    community.
  • 31:03 - 31:07
    And also their relationship with technology
    kind of feels very.. I mean it's strange to
  • 31:07 - 31:07
    say this
  • 31:07 - 31:13
    'cause for me as a sort of non-believer
    in ghosts I find the technology maybe
  • 31:13 - 31:18
    inherently flawed, but I.. the approach
    seems so honest to me in a way.
  • 31:18 - 31:22
    Like they're really setting out to make tools
    in a very honest way, very little commercial
  • 31:22 - 31:22
    interest,
  • 31:22 - 31:26
    to try to satisfy this niche community.
  • 31:26 - 31:28
    So anyway, this is like a... it was really
    getting
  • 31:28 - 31:30
    back to sort of, like, DIY culture
  • 31:30 - 31:34
    of people making technology
    for their own needs.
  • 31:34 - 31:36
    And it's a relatively self-aware community
    too,
  • 31:36 - 31:37
    like they talk about this idea
  • 31:37 - 31:40
    of matrixing a lot, which is the same as
    apophenia, right.
  • 31:40 - 31:45
    It's this idea that our brains are kind of
    hardwired to find patterns in randomness.
  • 31:45 - 31:49
    Like, they're aware of this.
    And so scepticism is like a big badge,
  • 31:49 - 31:53
    that people, if you wanna rise the ranks
    in the paranormal community,
  • 31:53 - 31:58
    you have to kind of debunk more
    ghosts than you find, right?
  • 31:58 - 31:59
    And this to me is something that's
    really interesting too,
  • 31:59 - 32:02
    'cause I think that they might actually
    be more critical of the investigations
  • 32:02 - 32:04
    they're doing than we're doing, right?
  • 32:04 - 32:09
    And so then when we look and see
    that we've got 5807 friend requests
  • 32:09 - 32:12
    it feels like this might be a matrixing
    that we're doing with our own technology,
  • 32:12 - 32:14
    with social media rather than
    the ghost hunting.
  • 32:14 - 32:18
    Or whether.. like, the kind of like popular
    idea
  • 32:18 - 32:19
    that technology can solve our problems,
  • 32:19 - 32:23
    that we can explain all these complicated
    problems in 13 minutes or less,
  • 32:23 - 32:27
    and 120 characters or less, it seems
    like maybe our relationship technology
  • 32:27 - 32:32
    maybe isn't any more flawed than
    their relationship with technology.
  • 32:32 - 32:38
    And so I decided to sort of set out
    on my own kind of... pilgrimage
  • 32:38 - 32:38
    to the internet, right?
  • 32:38 - 32:41
    In the same way the ghost hunters..
    this isn't something that ghost hunters do
  • 32:41 - 32:43
    kind of around the kitchen table
    over coffee, right,
  • 32:43 - 32:47
    they go to what they call 'areas of
    activity', which are actually not graveyards,
  • 32:47 - 32:47
    right.
  • 32:47 - 32:51
    This would be an area of inactivity.
    It's more, like, abandoned hospitals,
  • 32:51 - 32:55
    or insane asylums, like areas where
    activity happened.
  • 32:55 - 32:59
    And so the.. because I wasn't looking
    for ghosts, I'm looking for more
  • 32:59 - 33:04
    of this, like, reforged relationship
    with a.. an innocence lost of the internet.
  • 33:04 - 33:07
    The area that I decided to go to,
    which is talked about a lot by
  • 33:07 - 33:12
    Stephenson's 'Mother Earth Mother Board'
    article, is this Porthcurno beach,
  • 33:12 - 33:15
    which is.. if you're in the UK and you
    just keep driving west as far as you can
  • 33:15 - 33:20
    until.. literally when the land ends
    there's a hotel called Land's End,
  • 33:20 - 33:25
    and when you're there, you're
    within, like, 3 km of really cool stuff.
  • 33:25 - 33:32
    So you're in.. you're where 15% of the global
    internet flows through fibre-optic cables.
  • 33:32 - 33:35
    It's historically where the pirate ships
    would hide in the coves.
  • 33:35 - 33:38
    2000 BC it was where all the standing-stone
    circles..
  • 33:38 - 33:41
    there's all these standing stones in this
    area.
  • 33:41 - 33:45
    It's where in 1870 the first telegraph came
    out
  • 33:45 - 33:46
    of the ocean, the exact same beach
  • 33:46 - 33:48
    that the fibre-optic cables are at now.
  • 33:48 - 33:53
    2 km up the beach is where Marconi
    was building these amazing structures
  • 33:53 - 33:56
    to send the first wireless transmissions
    over the Atlantic,
  • 33:56 - 34:01
    all within this super-remote area
    way out at the west of the UK.
  • 34:01 - 34:06
    And so, I made my map and I had
    my little destinations I wanted to go to,
  • 34:06 - 34:11
    I rented a car, I got my gear.
    I had a mix of, like, ghost-hunting gear
  • 34:11 - 34:14
    that I bought and some that I'd made,
    and some just other devices that I'd thought
  • 34:14 - 34:17
    might come in handy.
  • 34:17 - 34:21
    And I started by doing something that
    Neal Stephenson suggested to do
  • 34:21 - 34:24
    if you're hunting for the internet,
    which is to follow the manholes.
  • 34:24 - 34:26
    And so I started just following
    the manholes.
  • 34:26 - 34:30
    And.. it really.. it's.. so when you're on
    these like surfer beaches,
  • 34:30 - 34:33
    where nobody is and you see
    like 30 manholes in the parking lot
  • 34:33 - 34:36
    that's meant just to get to the beach
    to go surfing,
  • 34:36 - 34:39
    you're probably getting close.
  • 34:39 - 34:41
    On these little farmroads that
    were just out in the middle of nowhere
  • 34:41 - 34:45
    with just sheep kind of grazing,
    every once in a while there'd be a driveway
  • 34:45 - 34:49
    that had these really large sort of
    access covers,
  • 34:49 - 34:52
    and when you looked, they're designed
    to look like these typical british country
  • 34:52 - 34:53
    houses,
  • 34:53 - 34:57
    but on closer inspection you can see
    that there's all these extra security measures
  • 34:57 - 35:03
    and blacked-out windows,
    and so this is a internet landing location.
  • 35:03 - 35:07
    Farms that have way more airconditioning
    than they need for the .. laughing .. sheep.
  • 35:07 - 35:10
    That's probably a good sign
    you're getting close.
  • 35:10 - 35:15
    But I wasn't.. I wasn't really interested
    in.. as a sort of journalistic endeavour,
  • 35:15 - 35:18
    like, it was really more.. I wanted to
    sort of step away from the computer
  • 35:18 - 35:22
    for a moment,
    I wanted to get out into nature
  • 35:22 - 35:25
    and I wanted to sort of just see
    what it felt like to stand on top of that
  • 35:25 - 35:25
    cable,
  • 35:25 - 35:28
    you know, what would it feel like to stand
    on top of this cable where 25% of the traffic
  • 35:28 - 35:31
    was flowing through.
  • 35:31 - 35:35
    And so I started taking this series of
    landscapes, like just landscape photography.
  • 35:35 - 35:39
    Sometimes.. sometimes the cable was
    within the frame.
  • 35:39 - 35:42
    When I took this photo I actually didn't know
    exactly what I was shooting,
  • 35:42 - 35:46
    but in this frame is both the cable and
    the GCHQ-tapped cable,
  • 35:46 - 35:50
    which you can kind of see the dishes
    up there in the background.
  • 35:50 - 35:56
    But it's.. it was less for me about, like,
    those actual recording the cables, the dishes.
  • 35:56 - 35:59
    It was more about something that I read about
    in Andrew Blum's book,
  • 35:59 - 36:03
    was there's this really interesting phenomena
    that happens when you go hunting for the internet,
  • 36:03 - 36:05
    which is like you end up in these super-remote
    locations,
  • 36:05 - 36:08
    like you're trying to go have this research
    and
  • 36:08 - 36:09
    experience with telecommunications,
  • 36:09 - 36:13
    but you end up like on these really
    lonely beaches which is by design
  • 36:13 - 36:16
    'cause they don't want cables and nets
    around them.
  • 36:16 - 36:19
    Many times you don't have 3G or cellphone
    service, and it's kind of just you and like,
  • 36:19 - 36:20
    you know,
  • 36:20 - 36:23
    this lonely beach.
    It's.. this.. sort of interesting,
  • 36:23 - 36:28
    for me it was really beautiful, like,
    It really felt.. it felt good.
  • 36:28 - 36:30
    So.. this is something I've been doing
    more and more lately, and I just..
  • 36:30 - 36:34
    I go to these places as a way,
    not to necessarily document
  • 36:34 - 36:37
    physical artifacts of the internet
    but more just putting myself
  • 36:37 - 36:41
    in sort of a place where I wanna
    make art about the internet.
  • 36:41 - 36:44
    And the internet manifests itself
    in different ways in different countries.
  • 36:44 - 36:49
    In the UK, it's just these wooden signs,
    this is.. it's just a yellow wooden sign
  • 36:49 - 36:53
    that says 'telephone cable' on it,
    which is like the most beautiful
  • 36:53 - 36:57
    kind of, like, anticlimactic understated
    monument you could have, right?
  • 36:57 - 37:02
    So this is one of the biggest global
    internet connection points in the world
  • 37:02 - 37:05
    and it's just this little tiny sign, you know?
  • 37:05 - 37:09
    And to me that was really perfect
    in a way, like, I was.. I was really..
  • 37:09 - 37:11
    it felt good that it was that, and
    that something else.
  • 37:11 - 37:16
    And.. so at the same time I was taking that
    photography, I was also taking readings
  • 37:16 - 37:18
    with this series of ghost-hunting devices.
  • 37:18 - 37:22
    This is probably my favourite one,
    this is called the Ovilus 3.
  • 37:22 - 37:26
    This is by a company called 'Digital Dowsing',
    which is a really great name for
  • 37:26 - 37:32
    a ghost-hunting tech company,
    made by Bill Chappell.
  • 37:32 - 37:35
    And so the Ovilus 3 has this
    kind of like old.. it's called visual draw
  • 37:35 - 37:37
    mode.
  • 37:37 - 37:41
    And based on kind of EMF and temperature
    readings, it has this drawing system,
  • 37:41 - 37:43
    that it spits out.
  • 37:43 - 37:46
    And so at every place that I was taking
    a photograph I was also taking this reading
  • 37:46 - 37:49
    with this ghost-hunting device.
  • 37:49 - 37:53
    And so, this manifested in different ways.
    When I showed in the gallery one way was
  • 37:53 - 37:59
    in this series of essentially paired landscape
    photography where on the top is just a photograph
  • 37:59 - 38:02
    from these various places and then on the
    bottom
  • 38:02 - 38:04
    sort of laser-etched into the surface of the
    print
  • 38:04 - 38:07
    are these readouts from the ghost-hunting
    device.
  • 38:07 - 38:11
    Which is kind of.. even.. even if you didn't
    know
  • 38:11 - 38:12
    that came to the piece and didn't know the
    background
  • 38:12 - 38:16
    there's meant to be this kind of play between
    analogue and digital and this play between
  • 38:16 - 38:22
    kind of the spiritual and the real,
    and when you view these prints,
  • 38:22 - 38:24
    you kind of have the same interaction with
    the print
  • 38:24 - 38:26
    that I was having when I was documenting them,
  • 38:26 - 38:29
    which was you.. you had this kind of natural
    position when you're kind of viewing
  • 38:29 - 38:30
    the horizon line,
  • 38:30 - 38:31
    and then when we kind of check our phones,
    right,
  • 38:31 - 38:33
    and it's kind of like this all day long.
  • 38:33 - 38:35
    And so the pieces are meant to have that as
    well,
  • 38:35 - 38:37
    where you.. you kind of look at the horizon
    line
  • 38:37 - 38:41
    on the photo and then you kind of bend down
    to look at the little digital read-out.
  • 38:41 - 38:46
    So this was.. this was one of the series from
    an exhibition I did in London last year.
  • 38:46 - 38:53
    6 months ago - no, 3 months ago
    I got an invitation to come to New Zealand
  • 38:53 - 38:58
    which is a place that was on my kind of like
    bucket list for internet exploratory research
  • 38:58 - 38:59
    purposes,
  • 38:59 - 39:01
    because New Zealand has this.. this.. they
    have
  • 39:01 - 39:03
    more than 2 cables, but there is 1 cable
  • 39:03 - 39:06
    called the Southern Cross Network,
    which is essentially its main connection
  • 39:06 - 39:10
    to the globe, and it comes in
    on the West Coast and then
  • 39:10 - 39:15
    crosses, like, I don't... like 30 km maybe,
    and then exits on the right.
  • 39:15 - 39:18
    So it comes over from Australia,
    goes underground for a very short
  • 39:18 - 39:22
    amount of time, then bounces off
    for essentially California.
  • 39:22 - 39:28
    And that's its main connection
    to the world, these 2 very actually unguarded
  • 39:28 - 39:32
    connection points.
    I.. maybe in the Q&A I can talk about more..
  • 39:32 - 39:32
    about that.
  • 39:32 - 39:37
    But basically, on this trip I got..
    I mean I got there and they were doing
  • 39:37 - 39:37
    construction work
  • 39:37 - 39:42
    and the cable was just really there, like,
    it was dug up and in a puddle
  • 39:42 - 39:44
    and just sitting there next to this military
    compound
  • 39:44 - 39:46
    with like this military airstrip
  • 39:46 - 39:48
    with like planes taking off.
  • 39:48 - 39:51
    And I was there for 2 hours with a ghost-hunting
    device just kind of touching the cable
  • 39:51 - 39:55
    and nobody said anything.
    It was amazing. laughing
  • 39:55 - 39:59
    And.. prior to this trip though I was doing
    more kind of research to try and understand
  • 39:59 - 40:03
    what the internet really really was,
    and.. there's a lot of people in the room
  • 40:03 - 40:07
    who are more, who have more technical
    knowledge than I do, so if I'm..
  • 40:07 - 40:10
    if I'm misquoting things please tell me
    afterwards so I can update this.
  • 40:10 - 40:14
    But my.. my current understanding is that
    what's going through the fibre-optic
  • 40:14 - 40:21
    is essentially infrared.. infrared laser light
    that's being modulated at different frequencies
  • 40:21 - 40:25
    that kind of centre around
    this 1550 nm mark, right.
  • 40:25 - 40:34
    And so give or take a few nm, the internet
    happens generally in this near-infrared spectrum.
  • 40:34 - 40:40
    Which is interesting to me as kind of an artmaker,
    because most of our digital devices can sense
  • 40:40 - 40:45
    in that near-infrared spectrum, in that same
    1550 nm range.
  • 40:45 - 40:48
    So most.. most digital cameras you can open
    up
  • 40:48 - 40:50
    and .. if you go all the way down to the CCD
  • 40:50 - 40:54
    you can take off the infrared-blocking chip
    and you get left with a camera that senses
  • 40:54 - 40:56
    that light, and you can put another lens
    on top
  • 40:56 - 40:58
    that blocks everything but the infrared light,
  • 40:58 - 41:00
    and then you're left with a device that's
    kind of
  • 41:00 - 41:01
    in my head anyway,
  • 41:01 - 41:07
    sensing the world in the same sort of spectrum
    that's going through the fibre-optic cable.
  • 41:07 - 41:10
    So these tutorials are. have.. this presentation
    I'm gonna have a link to at the end,
  • 41:10 - 41:14
    so the links are here but this is from a website
    called Life Pixel which has really amazing
  • 41:14 - 41:19
    like screw-by-screw tutorials for how to do
    this with most consumer and like prosumer
  • 41:19 - 41:22
    digital cameras.
  • 41:22 - 41:25
    And so then I started shooting these..
    these are photographs from
  • 41:25 - 41:33
    this is from the West Coast of New Zealand,
    shot with this modified Lumix GF1 camera.
  • 41:33 - 41:36
    And so it started like.. I had this feeling
    where
  • 41:36 - 41:39
    the visuals that these cameras were giving,
  • 41:39 - 41:42
    like.. in.. there's like a technical connection
    to the internet, but for me there was also
  • 41:42 - 41:46
    sort of a visual connection where
    the photos had the sort of feeling
  • 41:46 - 41:49
    that I was having, they were sort of these
    dark strange glimpses of the internet,
  • 41:49 - 41:54
    that wasn't Nyan cats and unicorns, right,
    it was this kind of, like, darker stranger
  • 41:54 - 41:55
    view
  • 41:55 - 41:58
    of what the internet landscape looked like,
    and the more I was taking photos
  • 41:58 - 42:02
    the sort of less and less interested I got
    in actually shooting a cable
  • 42:02 - 42:06
    and the more and more interested I got
    in just what these landscapes looked like.
  • 42:06 - 42:10
    And so in this example you can kind of see
    the dirt that's kind of slowly growing over
  • 42:10 - 42:16
    from where the trench was dug,
    or in this one.. from this distance
  • 42:16 - 42:18
    you can't see anything.
    There's a small moment where like
  • 42:18 - 42:21
    an old coaxial cable kind of
    comes out of that cliff.
  • 42:21 - 42:25
    But for me it's more about really
    thinking about like an old-school artform,
  • 42:25 - 42:27
    of like the landscape, and trying to think
    about
  • 42:27 - 42:29
    how I can make these landscape images
  • 42:29 - 42:33
    that are sort of reflective both of the
    physical landscape and of our kind of like
  • 42:33 - 42:36
    network landscape and cultural landscape.
  • 42:36 - 42:39
    So these are just some of the kind of images
    I was taking on this New Zealand trip.
  • 42:39 - 42:43
    And yeah, again, sometimes there is like
    no visual evidence,
  • 42:43 - 42:48
    sometimes it's just.. just a tree that happens
    to be growing on top of the internet.
  • 42:48 - 42:50
    And so I'm still.. this is stuff I'm still
    going
  • 42:50 - 42:52
    through at the moment.
  • 42:52 - 42:55
    Now I'm kinda drifting into
    works in progress,
  • 42:55 - 43:00
    but where I'm thinking this is going
    in one way is a series of new websites
  • 43:00 - 43:05
    that I'm gonna be making that
    are really boring.
  • 43:05 - 43:07
    I think there's like a really big
    market in boring in the arts
  • 43:07 - 43:08
    that's coming up.
  • 43:08 - 43:10
    Like I think we've had enough
    of this like really quick stuff,
  • 43:10 - 43:14
    so now I'm gonna take it back,
    and so I'm making pieces that are..
  • 43:14 - 43:16
    I had these experiences..
    so these are tripod shots.
  • 43:16 - 43:19
    I'm shooting usually like 10-15
    minute tripod shots at these
  • 43:19 - 43:24
    different locations, and...
    so these are really quiet moments,
  • 43:24 - 43:28
    essentially just video streaming
    into a browser,
  • 43:28 - 43:32
    and part of the idea is like giving..
    forcing people to have the experience
  • 43:32 - 43:35
    that I was having, so it's..
    I would find myself in these amazing locations
  • 43:35 - 43:38
    and sometimes there'd even be like
    whales breaching in the background
  • 43:38 - 43:42
    and like 7 minutes into the shot
    I'd catch myself, like, you know,
  • 43:42 - 43:46
    bending down to the phone again,
    and like, even in this like amazing environment
  • 43:46 - 43:49
    like I was having a hard time
    breaking out of that really like rapid-phased
  • 43:49 - 43:52
    sort of click-bait mentality that I'm starting
    to fall into as well,
  • 43:52 - 43:56
    and so I want these websites to be
    super super boring,
  • 43:56 - 44:00
    like, more contemplative, more
    on the timeline of what viewing nature is
  • 44:00 - 44:00
    like
  • 44:00 - 44:03
    rather than what viewing the web is like.
  • 44:03 - 44:05
    So this is.. this is the triangular sign here
    is
  • 44:05 - 44:08
    what the cable signs look like in New Zealand,
  • 44:08 - 44:11
    which is, if there's any copy-me fans, like,
    when I got out there and found
  • 44:11 - 44:14
    that there's this like beautiful triangle,
    like, standing over the internet,
  • 44:14 - 44:16
    was like an amazing moment for me.
  • 44:16 - 44:20
    But the.. so these websites are gonna be
    different websites.. each website will
  • 44:20 - 44:26
    just have one video flowing through it,
    slow, infrared video shots with this sort
  • 44:26 - 44:27
    of audio
  • 44:27 - 44:32
    in the background. The audio is made
    from my own ghost-hunting tech,
  • 44:32 - 44:35
    which I'll be releasing when I get finished
    with all the stuff.
  • 44:35 - 44:37
    So this is my own version of the
    spirit box,
  • 44:37 - 44:39
    where, instead of just scanning through
    the radio, I have it hooked up
  • 44:39 - 44:43
    to a pulse sensor,
    so it's skipping through the radio stations
  • 44:43 - 44:44
    based on my heart beat.
  • 44:44 - 44:47
    So every time my pulse goes
    it switches radio stations.
  • 44:47 - 44:52
    And.. so the audio is like.. yah, it looked..
    I looked rather strange like just kind of
  • 44:52 - 44:52
    sitting there
  • 44:52 - 44:55
    trying to commune with the internet, like,
    hooked put to this heart monitor
  • 44:55 - 44:57
    and this infrared camera.
  • 44:57 - 45:00
    But the pieces are sort of meant to
    kind of hopefully give
  • 45:00 - 45:02
    some of those feelings I was having
    when I was there.
  • 45:02 - 45:07
    And the other idea is that these videos
    are all gonna be located in servers
  • 45:07 - 45:11
    that are as close as possible to where
    I shot them, so
  • 45:11 - 45:14
    I'm actually thinking of them less as websites
    as kind of like network-specific videos.
  • 45:14 - 45:19
    And so, in the New Zealand example,
    I have server space in New Zealand now,
  • 45:19 - 45:23
    where these videos are hosted,
    so that when you view the video,
  • 45:23 - 45:27
    it loads into the browser and it's
    streaming.. you know, chances are,
  • 45:27 - 45:30
    you have like kind of like a 50-50 chance
    depending on what country you are in,
  • 45:30 - 45:34
    that the video, as it's being converted into
    the same spectrum that it's shot in,
  • 45:34 - 45:39
    is also streaming kind of like just underneath
    the frame there.
  • 45:39 - 45:42
    And so even though you can't kind of
    witness this visually, the idea is like
  • 45:42 - 45:45
    trying to.. kind of like I was doing with
    the
  • 45:45 - 45:47
    wikipedia series.. like trying to come up
  • 45:47 - 45:50
    with not just a piece that's kind of
    a visual aesthetic of the internet,
  • 45:50 - 45:55
    but something that's really kind of about
    an experience of the network.
  • 45:55 - 45:57
    And then the last sort of thing
    I'm playing with is the..
  • 45:57 - 46:02
    they're gonna be all hosted at these URLs,
    that when you copy and paste the URL
  • 46:02 - 46:08
    into a mapping application, the URL is
    actually a GPS coordinate,
  • 46:08 - 46:12
    so if you paste the URL into Google Maps,
    it'll take you to the exact location
  • 46:12 - 46:13
    where the camera was housed (?).
  • 46:13 - 46:16
    And so, in Google Earth you can
    kind of see the triangular sign and the tree
  • 46:16 - 46:22
    that is the same sign and tree
    from the image.
  • 46:22 - 46:25
    And so, I'm kind of playing with the idea
    of the URL as being both
  • 46:25 - 46:33
    an address on the globe and the network,
    and trying to tie again together these 2 things.
  • 46:33 - 46:37
    And part of this for me is again, like,
    without being too nostalgic for the internet
  • 46:37 - 46:38
    of old,
  • 46:38 - 46:43
    allow the influences that I'm drawing from,
    from the kind of earlier net art scene
  • 46:43 - 46:49
    was characterized with this kind of classic
    net art diagram, where.. the art happens here,
  • 46:49 - 46:49
    right,
  • 46:49 - 46:54
    like it's not.. there was this big push
    in the earlier net art wave that wasn't about
  • 46:54 - 46:59
    having kind of imagery that was sort of
    quasi-antithetic(?) of the internet
  • 46:59 - 47:02
    coming on tumbler and being printed
    in 3D printing into objects (?)
  • 47:02 - 47:04
    and showing up in a gallery,
    but it was really thinking
  • 47:04 - 47:07
    more fundamentally about
    the internet as a platform and a vehicle
  • 47:07 - 47:13
    for viewing art and art that can only
    happen within that medium.
  • 47:13 - 47:17
    And so I'm kind of trying to take
    that idea that's an old one,
  • 47:17 - 47:20
    and overlay that diagram on top
    of something that's like one step removed
  • 47:20 - 47:24
    in terms of the metaphor, and thinking
    about art that happens in a physical location
  • 47:24 - 47:26
    and in the network at the same time.
  • 47:26 - 47:30
    I could do one more project or we
    could do Q&A,
  • 47:30 - 47:34
    how much time do we have now,
    5 more minutes?
  • 47:34 - 47:36
    Maybe I'll wrap it up there.
    Angel: ... 10-15 minutes...
  • 47:36 - 47:38
    Evan: Ok, ok, I'll do one more project.
    Ok.
  • 47:38 - 47:43
    So that was.. that's going up to like
    yah, 3.. this is now 2 months ago..
  • 47:43 - 47:46
    3 months ago.
    I got invited to do a piece in Paraguay
  • 47:46 - 47:50
    which is not one of the main
    internet hubs, globally.
  • 47:50 - 47:53
    But I decided to kind of wrestle with a
    different piece of the infrastructure of the
  • 47:53 - 47:53
    internet,
  • 47:53 - 47:56
    which is kind of the surface, right,
    the place that we have this
  • 47:56 - 47:59
    more immediate contact with the network.
  • 47:59 - 48:03
    And.. 'cause I noticed when we.. when you
    film
  • 48:03 - 48:05
    devices in infrared it has this interesting
    scenario
  • 48:05 - 48:10
    where the visual spectrum is kind of inverted
    in a way where.. the LEDs don't really
  • 48:10 - 48:14
    emit much infrared light at all,
    and so the screen, to the viewer,
  • 48:14 - 48:19
    you see everything, but to the infrared camera
    it's almost completely black.
  • 48:19 - 48:21
    And similarly the kind of infrared lights
    that sort of shine from the top
  • 48:21 - 48:24
    of all of our iPhones at our faces
    all the time,
  • 48:24 - 48:26
    which we can't see with the naked eye,
    become more and more apparent
  • 48:26 - 48:28
    when you're shooting with the infrared.
  • 48:28 - 48:32
    And so, I started.. built this kind of contraption
    that I set up in my hotel room
  • 48:32 - 48:36
    which looked really strange, and then
    invited people to come up to the hotel room
  • 48:36 - 48:40
    and kind of put their device on top of
    this camera rig, and then
  • 48:40 - 48:44
    the invitation was just to waste time,
    like, again, trying to get back to this idea
  • 48:44 - 48:47
    of casual computing, like,
    what do you do when you're in line
  • 48:47 - 48:50
    at the grocery store, waiting at the
    doctor's office, like, what's your bag,
  • 48:50 - 48:52
    is it Angry Birds, is it checking facebook?
  • 48:52 - 48:57
    And I just said, 'here, waste 5 or 10 minutes'
    and I would record them with this
  • 48:57 - 49:02
    infrared camera and it's kind of..
    in a way it's connected
  • 49:02 - 49:04
    to the paranormal research,
    but maybe it's more connected
  • 49:04 - 49:06
    to the multi-touch series
    that has to do with sort of
  • 49:06 - 49:10
    backgrounding, the digital backgrounding,
    the interface design and foreground
  • 49:10 - 49:11
    in the human movement.
  • 49:11 - 49:16
    And so, what you get left with is..
    you see the way people are kind of moving
  • 49:16 - 49:22
    over these different devices without seeing
    these designs that the..
  • 49:22 - 49:24
    that Apple and Google are designing for us.
  • 49:24 - 49:24
    So I'll play just a minute what
    that looks like.
  • 49:24 - 49:48
    electronic noises like birds and bass
  • 49:48 - 50:14
    Evan: A little boring, right?
  • 50:14 - 50:20
    No, but that piece is meant to be this..
    have this kind of..
  • 50:20 - 50:22
    these things that kind of feel so natural
    and we get so into it,
  • 50:22 - 50:24
    and when you kind of remove
    what's actually happening,
  • 50:24 - 50:27
    it kind of ends up looking and
    sounding so alien, right?
  • 50:27 - 50:31
    The audio is actually just from
    a contact mic that's placed in the back,
  • 50:31 - 50:37
    so it's not.. it's just an analog microphone
    picking up the kind of soft fingertaps on
  • 50:37 - 50:38
    the screen.
  • 50:38 - 50:40
    And so the.. it became just this series of
    people
  • 50:40 - 50:41
    that sort of agreed to meet with me
  • 50:41 - 50:46
    and give me 5 or 10 minutes of their
    computing time, shown in the gallery
  • 50:46 - 50:50
    of this kind of series of again of like
    portraits through technology.
  • 50:50 - 50:54
    It's called 'Dances for Mobile Phones'.
    It's meant to be idea
  • 50:54 - 50:55
    that we're kind of dancing for them.
  • 50:55 - 51:00
    Anyway, so I'll leave it there.
    So this is me, kind of struggling through,
  • 51:00 - 51:04
    trying again to make work and trying
    to find these sort of optimistic paths
  • 51:04 - 51:07
    through a kind of increasingly dark
    internet landscape
  • 51:07 - 51:11
    and get back to this kind of more
    magical moment I first had
  • 51:11 - 51:15
    when we first kind of understood
    what technological empowerment felt like.
  • 51:15 - 51:17
    So thank you so much for spending
    the hour with me,
  • 51:17 - 51:20
    and if there's any Q&A, I think we have
    a couple of minutes now.
  • 51:20 - 51:22
    Thank you.
  • 51:22 - 51:34
    applause
  • 51:34 - 51:37
    applause
  • 51:37 - 51:43
    Angel: Thank you so much for your
    phenomenal talk, Evan,
  • 51:43 - 51:46
    I think you can tell by the applause that
    the people really really liked it.
  • 51:46 - 51:48
    Evan: Thank you.
    Angel: It was really awesome.
  • 51:48 - 51:51
    Angel: So we have another 5-10 minutes
    for questions and answers.
  • 51:51 - 51:54
    If you ask questions, please move to the
    microphones.
  • 51:54 - 51:59
    We have 4 microphones here in the hall.
    Do we have any question from the internet?
  • 51:59 - 52:03
    Internet? No? Alrighty. So we'll start
    with this question from over there.
  • 52:03 - 52:09
    Question: I really liked your term 'disembodied
    human energy'. I'm gonna start using that
  • 52:09 - 52:10
    "DHE".
  • 52:10 - 52:13
    Evan: It's not my term, but I like it too.
  • 52:13 - 52:17
    Q: I've been writing about that as well
    from the dark side of how the internet
  • 52:17 - 52:23
    and digital culture is affecting our
    behaviours and society, and was
  • 52:23 - 52:28
    kind of putting that into terms of
    disembodying experience.. disembody..
  • 52:28 - 52:35
    disembodied information, and I'm really
    going after that a lot in terms of
  • 52:35 - 52:43
    analyzing digital culture, and just
    wondering what you think we might do
  • 52:43 - 52:49
    in order to reembody our culture more
    and not get so lost in these
  • 52:49 - 52:54
    technological things that we can do,
    but to, like, I just was covering
  • 52:54 - 53:01
    the failed Paris climate summit,
    and I feel like the corporate agenda
  • 53:01 - 53:06
    is liking that we are going more
    and more into a disembodied place,
  • 53:06 - 53:11
    because it can capture our energy more.
    So I'd just like to ask you
  • 53:11 - 53:15
    if you have any ideas, what we can do
    to be more reembodying our experiences.
  • 53:15 - 53:21
    Answer: Yah.. no, good question.
    I mean, I can only talk about what I'm..
  • 53:21 - 53:27
    how I'm kind of wrestling with it.
    In.. one sort of decision I made as an artist,
  • 53:27 - 53:30
    kind of, is like I feel like I make better
    work when I'm optimistic
  • 53:30 - 53:33
    rather than pessimistic.
    Like, I think, anyone who suffered
  • 53:33 - 53:36
    through depression, like, you know,
    or had people around you with depression,
  • 53:36 - 53:40
    it's not a good place to be in when you
    wanna make thin.. produce things, right?
  • 53:40 - 53:43
    And so, part of it is like just finding ways
    to fall in love with it again.
  • 53:43 - 53:46
    And so, for me that was part of it,
    it was just trying to find ways
  • 53:46 - 53:50
    to kind of fall in love with things again,
    to the point where I really want to make them.
  • 53:50 - 53:54
    And the other one, for me, too, I mean
    I know there's whole movements of people
  • 53:54 - 53:56
    who are doing these kind of digital retreat
    things which is something I hadn't
  • 53:56 - 54:02
    participated in in a formal setting,
    but for me just getting away for a moment
  • 54:02 - 54:05
    and having these excuses, even for just
    a few days or a week, to sort of
  • 54:05 - 54:10
    exist by myself without connection..
    I know it's nothing new, I know
  • 54:10 - 54:12
    that people are talking about this,
    but it had a real effect on me.
  • 54:12 - 54:15
    I mean, one thing that i noticed was,
    I was much more present, like,
  • 54:15 - 54:18
    especially on the UK trip, where..
    these are like really cliffy regions,
  • 54:18 - 54:21
    you know, so a lot of the hiking trails
    that I was shooting on were like
  • 54:21 - 54:25
    really steep drop-off on the other side
    of this path, and so I couldn't even do
  • 54:25 - 54:28
    what I normally do, even when I'm away
    from email, but I'm walking around the city
  • 54:28 - 54:31
    and I'm still thinking about.. 'Oh, I gotta
    email this person, I gotta do that..'
  • 54:31 - 54:35
    I'm not really present, right.
    And I noticed that I had to, like,
  • 54:35 - 54:38
    stop doing that because I kept
    slipping and falling and, like,
  • 54:38 - 54:40
    I didn't wanna die.
    And so I had this moment
  • 54:40 - 54:43
    being out in nature again, where,
    not only was I away from the tech,
  • 54:43 - 54:47
    but mentally I had to step away from it too,
    just to be really thinking about
  • 54:47 - 54:51
    'Left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot'.
    And being able to do that for a few days,
  • 54:51 - 54:54
    like, now, I'm lining up my schedule
    throughout the year
  • 54:54 - 54:56
    where I'm setting up these moments,
    where I have that time to do it.
  • 54:56 - 54:59
    And, I don't know if that's the answer or
    not,
  • 54:59 - 55:00
    but for me it's been one way to deal with
    it.
  • 55:00 - 55:03
    Angel: Thank you very much. Next question
    from this microphone please.
  • 55:03 - 55:06
    Q: Thank you very much.I don't know, is it
    on?
  • 55:06 - 55:09
    Angel: Yeah, it's on. Just speak into it.
  • 55:09 - 55:12
    Q: Thank you very much for your talk.
    I'd actually, for me personally,
  • 55:12 - 55:18
    I've been also struggling a lot with the
    thought about the dark sides of the internet
  • 55:18 - 55:19
    recently,
  • 55:19 - 55:22
    and your talk actually gave me back a lot
    of
  • 55:22 - 55:24
    positive attitude about it, so
  • 55:24 - 55:28
    that you very much for that.
    But one question that I have:
  • 55:28 - 55:33
    What is your 10-second definition of
    what is art, for you?
  • 55:33 - 55:35
    Evan: Oh my god.
    laughing
  • 55:35 - 55:36
    laughing
  • 55:36 - 55:39
    Evan: Alright, here's a short one I came up
    with,
  • 55:39 - 55:42
    'cause the long one's hard, right?
  • 55:42 - 55:47
    I think design is creative work that is influenced
    directly by money and art is creative work
  • 55:47 - 55:52
    that is influenced indirectly by money.
    And that's kind of the only difference.
  • 55:52 - 55:53
    laughing
    applause
  • 55:53 - 55:55
    Q: Thank you.
  • 55:55 - 55:59
    Angel: Thank you. Next question from that
    microphone over there.
  • 55:59 - 56:03
    Q: Hi. So I wasn't familiar with your work..
    I'm over here.
  • 56:03 - 56:06
    I'm not familiar with your work, and
    I really like it.
  • 56:06 - 56:10
    And what I liked most about it is
    really that sense of excitement and wonder
  • 56:10 - 56:16
    that you first had when you discovered..
    what was it? SCP? No, it was..
  • 56:16 - 56:18
    Evan: Yeah, FETCH.
    Q: Yeah, FETCH, right.
  • 56:18 - 56:21
    That's sort of.. that's still there in many
    ways,
  • 56:21 - 56:23
    it's different, but it's still there.
  • 56:23 - 56:27
    So, you know, I.. I recently discovered
    physics, and I've had sort of
  • 56:27 - 56:30
    the same thing where I am like,
    wow, we're able to understand things
  • 56:30 - 56:33
    in a way that I didn't think it was
    possible, because I hated physics
  • 56:33 - 56:36
    in school, and realized that
    this way it was taught
  • 56:36 - 56:40
    that was really boring.
    And so I'm thinking, ok,
  • 56:40 - 56:44
    if I were to do something
    like that, it requires you to
  • 56:44 - 56:46
    sort of take that step away
    from the technicality of it
  • 56:46 - 56:49
    to see the technicality of it.
    And how do you, with the internet,
  • 56:49 - 56:53
    how are you able to keep that distance
    and has that been a problem for you?
  • 56:53 - 56:57
    Evan: I mean, maybe it's easier for me
    because I'm not all that smart technically.
  • 56:57 - 57:01
    I mean, it's not like I was ever so close,
    like most of the code.. I had some
  • 57:01 - 57:04
    formal training when I got to
    graduate school, but I was never..
  • 57:04 - 57:06
    I'm not a very happy programmer.
  • 57:06 - 57:09
    You know, it was never my kind of
    native realm anyway,
  • 57:09 - 57:12
    like, I came more from the design field.
  • 57:12 - 57:15
    So it didn't feel like anything I was having
    to turn off so much
  • 57:15 - 57:19
    'cause maybe I wasn't ever all that
    close to it, in a sense.
  • 57:19 - 57:23
    I don't.. that's maybe a bad answer,
    but it's probably the truth.
  • 57:23 - 57:24
    I've been trying to get closer to physics
    too.
  • 57:24 - 57:25
    Q: Yeah?
  • 57:25 - 57:29
    Evan: Like for me, like, I'm super fascinated
    by the electromagnetic spectrum right now.
  • 57:29 - 57:32
    Like the answer's in there, somewhere,
    I feel like, you know? laughing
  • 57:32 - 57:35
    Q: Alright, thanks!
    Angel: Awesome. Next question from here.
  • 57:35 - 57:41
    Q: Ok, thanks. I just.. I mean, the idea
    of understanding what's happening
  • 57:41 - 57:44
    in the internet is quite important,
    and I think we're a bit biased here
  • 57:44 - 57:50
    because we all have that visualization
    of the internet, and
  • 57:50 - 57:54
    my question now is:
    Your visualization is of course very
  • 57:54 - 58:00
    very valid and very vivid, but
    all those people that.. that do those
  • 58:00 - 58:04
    movements and they scroll facebook,
    how can we make this visualization,
  • 58:04 - 58:09
    because your.. yours is quite complicated,
    actually, and not as fast.
  • 58:09 - 58:14
    How could we.. how could we manage to
    give.. give them some sort of visualization,
  • 58:14 - 58:18
    because what.. what they see is only
    the apps, and they don't really
  • 58:18 - 58:19
    get to think about it more.
  • 58:19 - 58:24
    Evan: Yah. I don't know the answer to that.
    I mean, it's.. for me, part of the reason
  • 58:24 - 58:28
    that the infrastructure side is so interesting,
    is that I think that there's something
  • 58:28 - 58:32
    empowering about seeing what it is
    and knowing how it works.
  • 58:32 - 58:35
    Like, when it seems less mystical and
    magical, like the cloud, of course,
  • 58:35 - 58:39
    is this terrible metaphor that we all hate,
    and I think once.. even when I'm explaining
  • 58:39 - 58:44
    my work to non-technical people,
    the conversations I get into are actually
  • 58:44 - 58:46
    kind of interesting, 'cause they're interested
    in knowing that too, 'cause people
  • 58:46 - 58:49
    don't really talk about it.
    The media doesn't talk about it.
  • 58:49 - 58:51
    The companies that are trying to sell
    them services don't talk that way
  • 58:51 - 58:55
    'cause it doesn't benefit them, right,
    it's like... Apple, when your phone fills
  • 58:55 - 58:55
    up,
  • 58:55 - 58:58
    they just want you to click here to get
    more cloud storage space, and
  • 58:58 - 59:02
    they don't want you to know how to
    plug in a cable and get it off.
  • 59:02 - 59:06
    And so I think it's.. the question that
    you're asking is one that I'm asking myself,
  • 59:06 - 59:10
    like, how do you communicate some of these
    ideas to people that are..
  • 59:10 - 59:13
    I mean, I'm interested in both sides,
    I'm interested in people that are
  • 59:13 - 59:16
    technically adapt, having interesting ideas
    and conversations around this,
  • 59:16 - 59:19
    but then, how do you also communicate
    to people that this is a new conversation
  • 59:19 - 59:22
    to?
  • 59:22 - 59:24
    I don't know the answer to that,
    that's what I'm trying to kind of wrestle
  • 59:24 - 59:24
    with
  • 59:24 - 59:25
    in a sense.
  • 59:25 - 59:32
    But I have.. I recently did a show in Florida
    at a university, and the docents there,
  • 59:32 - 59:35
    like the people that introduce people
    to the work, were all like senior citizens
  • 59:35 - 59:39
    that were volunteering time to the museum,
    and they were one of the most engaged
  • 59:39 - 59:43
    group of people I've ever had surrounding
    my work, 'cause they.. they knew..
  • 59:43 - 59:46
    it's not like they never heard of this stuff
    before, but they had a relationship with
  • 59:46 - 59:50
    technology, but they were more willing
    to ask questions about it,
  • 59:50 - 59:53
    like they weren't.. they didn't.. they didn't
    care if it sounded stupid,
  • 59:53 - 59:56
    and they were asking all those really
    interesting questions, and
  • 59:56 - 59:59
    seeing that happen to a community
    of people who were maybe
  • 59:59 - 60:03
    a further step removed from technology
    than I even am, that..
  • 60:03 - 60:06
    it's not that it was successful, but
    it felt to me that.. that they could
  • 60:06 - 60:10
    understand and have a relationship
    to it as art pieces, meant that there
  • 60:10 - 60:14
    was something there that was consumable
    by people that weren't.. aren't in this room,
  • 60:14 - 60:15
    you know?
  • 60:15 - 60:19
    Angel: Alright, thank you.
    As time is almost up, guy in orange,
  • 60:19 - 60:22
    you got the honour of the last question.
  • 60:22 - 60:27
    Q: With your browser cache thing,
    I did something similar with my computer.
  • 60:27 - 60:31
    I wrote a little script that runs in the
    background and makes a screenshot
  • 60:31 - 60:33
    every.. random seconds,
    Evan: Ok.
  • 60:33 - 60:37
    Q: And I had hoped about.. forgetting
    about it, but actually the...
  • 60:37 - 60:45
    the counterpart happened, that I checked
    the screenshots for every moment
  • 60:45 - 60:48
    I didn't have anything to do.
    And my behaviour was extremely
  • 60:48 - 60:51
    affected by it. Was.. did you have the
    same feeling about your browser cache?
  • 60:51 - 60:53
    Evan: Yeah.
    Q: Ehm, work?
  • 60:53 - 60:57
    Evan: Maybe later we can trade notes,
    I'd like to see your work.
  • 60:57 - 61:00
    Exactly, like one of the main things
    about that piece was like, it's like
  • 61:00 - 61:03
    living with a security camera, right,
    and you always know it's there,
  • 61:03 - 61:08
    like, I've gotten better and better about
    forgetting, but I still know it's there,
  • 61:08 - 61:11
    I still think about it, and I tried to do
    portraits of other people, like,
  • 61:11 - 61:15
    friends, like who else you're gonna ask
    to give your internet cache browsing data
  • 61:15 - 61:16
    to,
  • 61:16 - 61:18
    right?
    And it's..I recognized it was like a really
  • 61:18 - 61:21
    invasive question to ask people,
    you know?
  • 61:21 - 61:23
    You're really asking people.. I mean,
    usually the cache people give me
  • 61:23 - 61:27
    when I was making portraits of other people,
    I would tell them and then they would surf
  • 61:27 - 61:30
    and give it to me.
    Like, to just tell them, give me the cache
  • 61:30 - 61:30
    that
  • 61:30 - 61:33
    you didn't know I was gonna.. you didn't know
    I was monitoring, is like a really
  • 61:33 - 61:36
    invasive question to ask.
    But yeah, it's like essentially learning to
  • 61:36 - 61:40
    live with a security camera.
    But that's meant to be kind of built into
  • 61:40 - 61:43
    the piece, too, 'cause maybe, getting
    back to the last question, like,
  • 61:43 - 61:46
    one of the reactions I get from
    when people see that work in the gallery is
  • 61:46 - 61:51
    like.. they're like, oh wow, that's a really..
    maybe giving is the wrong word, but
  • 61:51 - 61:55
    that's a lot of.. it's a lot of.. you're sharing
    a lot, right, is the common reaction
  • 61:55 - 61:56
    I get from people.
  • 61:56 - 62:00
    And.. but part of the idea is then..
    we're all kind of sharing this
  • 62:00 - 62:03
    in different ways, right,
    this print, just because I put it in the gallery
  • 62:03 - 62:06
    doesn't mean there's any more or less
    eyeballs on that set of data
  • 62:06 - 62:09
    than your data, or your friend's data.
  • 62:09 - 62:13
    But yeah, of course, when you know
    the camera is there, it definitely
  • 62:13 - 62:17
    affects behaviour.
  • 62:17 - 62:26
    subtitles created by c3subtitles.de
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Title:
Evan Roth: Internet Landscapes
Description:

In Internet Landscapes, Evan Roth will discuss his work as it relates to visualizing, archiving and understanding the Internet and its effects on culture with a focus on the misuse of communication technologies. Roth will trace his personal and creative history within an Internet landscape that has changed significantly in the last 16 years. The presentation will include a range of work culminating in his more recent pilgrimages to the beaches of the UK, New Zealand and Sweden, where submarine Internet fiber optic cables reach the land. Armed with an array of paranormal technologies, Roth will recount his personal quest to visualize and reconnect with a changing Internet landscape.

Evan Roth

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:02:26

English subtitles

Revisions