Tag: Carly Whitaker

  • Is Algorithm the new Abstract?

    Is Algorithm the new Abstract?

    Watching the contemporary art scene evolve is a little bit like watching a sports game as a complete philistine with no knowledge of the rules. You can’t really tell who the star player is, you’re definitely not sure where the ball is going to go, you have no conception of what is allowed or not allowed, and just when you think you’ve gotten the grips of it, something unexpected happens and it is all upended.

    As with so many fields, technology has infiltrated the contemporary art scene. So just as you thought you were beginning to understand the Tracey Emin’s, the Ai Wei Wei’s, the Nicholas Hlobo’s, the Nandipha Mntambo’s, the art world threw you a curve-ball in the shape of the algorithm.

    Now I would like to think I am no novice when it comes to art but ask me about coding or Java or (I can’t even think of another word to put here) then I am stumped. As long as I can open my emails and post instastories then I don’t need to know. It is like that time old saying – “If you love something, don’t find out how it is made.” But now, the foreign language of programming is seeping into my perfect little contemporary art comfort zone, and I might need to start learning the rules.

    Ellsworth Kelly – Spectrum Colours arranged by chance III. 1951

    So as every good writer and researcher in the 21st century does, I went straight to Google (Ironically using its complex algorithms). Google told me that an algorithm was a “set of rules, or a process used in calculations or other problem-solving operations.” I mean if I’m honest, this didn’t help me much. As a society that are more attached to our devices than perhaps could ever have been predicted. Something that has always resonated with me was the video produced in 2015 of Otis Johnson, who had been released from prison after 44 years of incarceration. In this short interview with Al Jazeera, he gets off the subway at Times Square and is immediately bewildered by what he first thought was everyone talking to themselves but turned out to be what we all know to be FaceTime. It was the first moment where I sat and really considered how detached from reality we really are.

    Each step on a Fitbit, each 4am tweet, each calorie counted, or song downloaded is being controlled by that terrifyingly foreign language of code. Plebs like myself see 0s and 1s, and lots of disruptive / and ? and * and [ ] – yet the next generation contemporary artist is seeing infinite possibilities.

    Screenshot from selected/deleted/populated/isolated – cities in the global south, 2016 by Carly Whitaker

    Take Laurie Frick, a New York based artist, who has used various data-trackers to create large-scale representations of ‘self.’ In 2012, using the app Moodjam, Frick tracked her emotions and moods over the course of several days and then created works like the one below as visual articulations of this data. At first glance we see work akin to the mid-century minimalists Sol LeWitt, or Ellsworth Kelly. Closer to home, Johannesburg’s Carly Whitaker’s Selected/Deleted/Populated/Isolated  from 2016 uses collected, collated data to consider the representation of ‘other’ and uses Photoshop to disrupt and distort Google map images to create connections between cities in the global south. Each of these examples reflects on how digital data can lead to the abstraction or reorganisation of information.

    And so, I ask, has the new artistic tech-evolution redefined the abstract?

    Now that the digital age has permeated so much of our daily activity, how do we, as consumers of art, consider its permeation into the galleries? A large part of this new age of art seems to reflect on digital as disruptive. We see the background interfaces of the world wide web or distorted virtual realities – the relatively comfortable spaces of Google, Facebook and Instagram are discarded for the more uneasy abstract depths of the internet. Artists seem to be playing with the very ‘physicality of art’ – algorithms are used to create sketches that seem made of the human hand (See Jon McCormack’s Niche Constructions for example,or more fragmented abstract video works (like those of Casey Reas, or Diego Collado), or play with the developing technologies of virtual and augmented reality (See Blocked Content by the Russian collective Recycle Group or the work by Paul McCarthy and Christian Lemme.

    While some of the Western world thinks we still ride elephants in South Africa, our digital artists are in their own way coming of age – spurred on by innovative spaces like the Centre for the Less Good Idea who had a Virtual Reality exhibition last year, and the annual Fak’ugesi festival that celebrates the rise of African digital innovation.

    CUSS Group – New Horizons Installation Shot. 2016

    Two years ago, I went to the New Horizons exhibition presented by the CUSS group at the Stevenson, and left feeling bewildered. As one expects when they see life-size pixelated dog statues, couches floating in Dali-esque, virtual waters and photoshopped couples superimposed into neon-blue digitally rendered nightclubs that look like the infamous Avastar (may it RIP). Were they considering the banality of the internet, the superficiality and excess of capitalist culture, the absurdity of digital programmes like photoshop and the constructed ‘realities’ they create, or perhaps they were just commenting on society’s gluttonous consumption of the ‘digital dream.’

    Part of what the age of the algorithm means is that the digital is inescapable. Even Home Affairs uses computers these days. And as artists begin to consider the complexities of this omnipresent and opaque technology, we as viewers need to be prepared to confront a new abstract.

    CUSS Group – New Horizons Installation Shot. 2016

    Many contemporary South African artists are transcending the boundary of the screen or page and using 3D ‘collages’ to juxtapose the virtual with the corporeal. At the Post African Futures exhibition at the Goodman Gallery in 2015, Pamela Sunstrum and Thenjiwe Nkosi created a visual cacophony, Notes from the Ancients, and used installation to contrast the now all too familiar motherboard, with 3D printed masks mirrored on ‘traditional’ African artefacts, murals of mine-dump sand dunes, and defunct technology. This type of disruptive installation makes us constantly try to construct connections, to create some type of linear understanding. Frequently we are left dissatisfied, or with so many ideas spinning in our head we feel dizzy.

    Tabita Rezaire’s Exotic Trade  of 2017, also exhibited at the Goodman Gallery, considered the erasure of black womxn from the “dominant narrative of technological achievement” (Rezaire 2017) and how much of scientific advancement has capitalised from the ‘availability’ of the black body. The juxtaposition of images from African spirituality, the ‘glitchy’ virtual world, the jarring electric pink gynaecologist examination table, and the omnipotent, frequently ‘sexualised’ or ‘maternalised’ black womxn body are jarring reminders of the darker side of the digital arena. The motherboardby name reiterates the ‘mother earth’, maker of all – but disrupts the notion of the natural by the ubiquitous computer. We are confronted with a maze of imagery, that traverses the boundaries of the body, and technology itself.

    As we begin to adjust to a new abstract, I ask – “where to from here?”

    Tabita Rezaire – Sugar Walls Teardom, 2016 from Exotic Trade
  • #everydayfilters – Lala Crafford on exploring the filter as an object in itself

    Artist Lala Crafford‘s work revolves around themes relating to perception and how we experience the everyday through the use of ephemeral mediums such as shadows, light and sound, explored mainly through installation work. How we gain insight through sight has been a running theme for Lala over the past year. Growing up on a game farm where is was often given the task of holding the spotlight during night-time game drives, she believes that any kind of artist has the responsibility to hold the metaphorical ‘spotlight’ in everyday life- to shed light on or to generate experiences around what we often take for granted.

    Lala started her two week residency with Floating Reverie run by digital practitioner Carly Whitaker – an online residency where artists are invited to work on a creative process repeatedly for two weeks. She has since been creating images for her theme, #everydayfilters. Tying in with her curiosity around perception, the focus of the work she will be producing throughout the residency will play with the idea of what a filter means, especially on social media, considering how they have become part of how we frame and experience images. She uploads the unedited images she produces daily on to her Instagram account, as a platform associated with the use of filters as well as a platform that has become part of everyday life.  “Instead of using Instagram filters or typical filters that you would apply to images of everyday life, I decided to use physical objects as filters, seeing as those physical objects are also part of our everyday lives,” Lala explains.

    partner

    With a mobile device being associated with Instagram, she covers the camera on her phone with the filter she has decided to work with for the day. These include cloth, wire mesh, glass bottles filled with water and ink, acetate with raindrops, with an emphasis on improvising her filter choices.

    The themes of her images are similar to what she describes as typical Instagram images, such as photographs of her dog, her boyfriend, landscapes, and balcony views. She uses hashtags which relate directly to the residency such as #postinternetart #internetart and #digitalart. However, she also uses hashtags related such as #boyfriendsofinstagram to make her work appear more “Instagram-y” and less like art, to see what that does.This offers a point of comparison to see how her images look in relation to images uploaded not necessarily for the same purpose by others under the same hashtag.

    blackcloth

    The work she has developed so far engages with the idea of the filter as an object in and of itself, and not simply a screen that creates interesting visual effects but is ultimately looked past. This is emphasized by the fact that in some of the images you are not able to see what is behind the filter – it is no longer something to just look through. “[In these cases] the filter took over and became the most important thing,” Lala explains.

    Check her out on Instagram to follow how the last week of her residency unfolds.

    inkbottle

     

  • Carly Whitaker – exploring romance online through digital art

    I caught up with digital artist, researcher and curator Carly Whitaker about her latest work and the digital art space in South Africa.

    “My work often amounts to expressing who I am and using the medium to maximize that expression,” Carly expressed. Her work explores on how we behave online, our relationship to the online as well as how our relationships with one another manifest online.

    Carly views her research and writing as a way to critically interrogate digital mediums. “I am extremely invested in finding out what it means to other practitioners to use the medium and how it assists them, especially in South Africa where it is an emerging medium and emerging field.”. Her work is influenced by the internet as a whole, particularly how content manifests online. She expressed how she is constantly overwhelmed and falling in love with the internet. The content of her work is largely influenced by music. “I find that a lot of the way in which we behave in relationships and behave online comes through in song lyrics,” Carly explained. Her creative process usually starts off with her creating a gif. Thereafter she translates that into a gif box or a physical manifestation of a gif.

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    EMOJIKINDALOVE (2016) – animated gif

    Her latest installation, titled All the feels for you, is a collection of work was part of a group exhibition that took place at No End Contemporary Art Space. Extending from her fascination with the online and the specific kinds of communication that it engenders, these works look at the feelings you get when you first meet someone, and you quite literally have all the feels for them. Carly explores how within that initial spark there is a constant negotiation between partners, and how online platforms are embedded within that negotiation. The specific work You text nothing like you look references Frank Oceans song ‘Good Guy’. This gif is about figuring out how someone else speaks and how they function online, specifically through messaging. What can be challenging is figuring out how to translate these digital artifacts into physical spaces. Carly has been trying to work through this, describing All the feels for you as being the closest she has gotten to re-creating in a physical space how we interact with our computer screens. Carly gave the curators at No End instructions on how to install her works in such  way that they collectively reflected the way one behaves within one’s computer screen with multiple tabs open. “So they are individual works in their own right but collectively they become the sum of their parts,” Carly explained. She is thinking about taking this work further to challenge herself in terms of display.

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    All of the feels for you (2016) – installation

    On the 26th of January Carly will be part of another group exhibition at No End titled What’s in it for you?. The two works she will be showing, Algorithmic Kinda Love and I am a unicorn, are both gifs and are simple explorations of concepts that she is developing in more complex ways in other works. Algorithmic Kinda Love is a response to her earlier work EMOJIKINDALOVE which looked at how we use emojis to express affections. This latest work looks at how we try to find love through algorithms in online spaces such as Tinder and other dating sites. I am a unicorn relates to this work conceptually in that it explores how people try to find the perfect partner. “So we are all searching for unicorns and we all think we are unicorns,” Carly explained.

    Investing in all aspects of the digital art practice, Carly also runs an online residency program called Floating Reverie. She invites various artists once a month to be part of this two week long program. “The idea is that they work on their research and their process and their concept every day. And each day repetitively somehow doing something or building on a concept that they have done,” Carly explained. She is also planning to start an online gallery called Blue Ocean.

    Carly notes that there are few practitioners that are looking at the medium at the moment. However, she is excited about the growth the digital art space has seen and will see in the future. For her, seeing big galleries such as Stevenson and Goodman getting behind artist who are using the medium is evidence of the growing recognition and support both for artists and the medium. Keeping up to date with the work of current graduates and seeing the way that people use apps such as Instagram and Snapchat as a creative outlet is encouraging for her and the future of digital arts in South Africa.

    Follow Carly on Instagram to get an idea of the kind of concepts and processes she is working through. Check out her website to have a look at what she describes as a more retrospective, consolidated view of her work.

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    So many times, so many ways (2016) – generative code
  • Everything you need to know about Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival 2016

    Everything you need to know about Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival 2016

    “Ungaphthelwa Innovation Yako” / “Own Your Innovation”

    In a collaboration between City of Johannesburg, Tshimologong Precinct and Wits University, this year’s Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival is created for conversations, collaborations and projects for Africans by Africans. It runs from the 19th of August until the 3rd of September. The annual festival is an “African celebration of digital technology, art and culture” in Johannesburg aimed at encouraging people in the city and on the continent more broadly to own their creativity and innovation through thinking about and constructing African visualization of the city, the digital, the playful and the future. With this year’s larger theme being the “AFRO TECH RIOT”, explorations of African knowledge systems, femininity, community and spirituality in relation to technology and the digital are the threads pulled throughout the two-week long festival. Johannesburg’s newly constructed tech hub Tshimologong on 47 Juta Street Braamfontein will be turned into a collaborative space through workshops, talks, installations, exhibitions, performances, pitches, awards, parties and gaming.. The festival asks participants to think about and engage with the idea that relationship between art, technology and creativity are “culturally embedded phenomenon” (Bristow 2014: 168). The revolutionary spirit of the festival is supported by its other partners British Council’s ConnectZA, Goethe Institut, and the Johannesburg Centre for Software Engineering (JCSE).

    Major events this year include old time favourites along with new exciting projects and talks:

    Fak’ugesi Digital African Residency in which local and international digital artists and creatives are invited to be on residency to explore the festivals theme. This year, with Pro Helvetia Johannesburg, saw an open call for creatives within the SADC region. The festival residents will be exhibiting their work and participating in discussions in the Reverse Digital Hustle (with Livity Africa) on the 24th of August, the Fak’ugesi Residents Exhibition from the 29th to the 30th of August, as well as being part of other smaller workshops at Tshimologong and the Fak’ugesi Soweto Pop Up in Orlando East. This year’s residents are Vuyi Chaza from Zimbabwe, Cebo Simphiwe Xulu and Regina Kgatle from South Africa.

    fak'ugesi residents

    The Agile Africa Conference (22 & 23 August) hosts African software professionals to discuss and brainstorm better ways of working with and creating software, as well as what this means within an African context.

    This year also includes a talks program in which digital artists and technological innovators discuss African knowledge systems in technology and the digital space and get a deeper understanding of “cultures of technology” (Bristow 2014: 169). The first being the Reverse Digital Hustle Talk featuring this year’s residents and guest Tabita Rezaire (24 August). We also see Fak’ugesi’s twin festival CairoTronica feature with its Director Haytham Naywar forming part of the second Fak’ugesi Talks (26 August) along with Joshua Noble and The Constitute.

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    The role of women in technology is being given multiple chances in the limelight this year with events including Maker Library Network & Geekulcha Open Data Quest workshop (24 August) which challenged participants to use online data about Women and Human Settlements to put together a story board that explores and tries to address the social relations involved around these social issues. Other events include the Women in Tech @ Fak’ugesi (29 August) which is a discussion and networking platform focused on the need to support and highlight the achievements of women in the tech industry. The Creative Hustle as part of the new Fak’ugesi Talks program with ConnectZA, puts together industry professionals Karen Palmer and Valentina Floris to talk about pushing boundaries and how technology and creativity combine.

    In thinking about technology by African for Africans, #HackTheConstitution (26 August) provides an interactive version of South Africa’s constitution in which lawyers, developers, UX specialists and artists are invited to work on creating a prototype app that can make the Constitution more accessible.

    A MAZE Johannesburg will be adding to the playful aspect of the festival with their events, talks and workshops running from 31st of August to the 3rd of September for gaming enthusiasts.

    The Market Hack, one of the festivals popular events, with ConnectZA and South African Maker Collective (27 August) is a daylong takeover of The Grove at South Point (Braamfontein) involving activities related to play and learning about 3D printing, virtual reality and sound.

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    Maker Library Network & Geekulcha (1 September) will be running 3D fashion experience in collaboration with designers from the Tshwane Fashion Project to explore how the 3D experience can add to the fashion industry.

    Also new to the program is a “future sounds” workshop (25 – 27 August) with Goethe Johannesburg will bring together the Create Africa Collective and Berlin-based digital artist, The Constitute, to mix technological innovation with the re-imagining of sound. The results of this collaboration will form part of the Alight Bloc Party/Tshimologong Precinct Launch (1 September) and will light up the Precinct with featured projects including Future Sounds, installations provided by UK-based creative studio SDNA and light-based installations from South African artists to officially open up the Precinct.

    The A MAZE and Fak’ugesi Soweto Pop Ups (27 and 28 August) will be held at Trackside Creative in Orlando East which will provide a mixture of virtual reality experiences, game design workshops, live digital installations and various projects related to video, performance and other technological forms.

    Visitors can also check out The Rotating Exhibition Room which has an ongoing exhibition until the 31st of August featuring video art from artist Magdalena Kallenberge, Ahmed Esher, Carly Whitaker, Mohamed Allam, Foundland and students from The Animation School.

    To find out more information about the festival and to look up the other smaller workshops and events they will be running check out their website


    References:

    Bristow, T. (2013). “We want the Funk”.

    Bristow, T. (2014). “From Afrofuturism to Post African Futures”.