building utility (2)

alexander_buildings3

More interactive, as-yet-unreconstructed web art--this time GIFs made with Duncan Alexander's build-a-building-that-looks-suspiciously-like-a-Peter-Halley-painting utility.
Previous example

alexander_buildings2

The above drawings were originally full-screen but were resized for the blog. Since browsers no longer read GIFs, these simulations were made using HTML5 from an app that draws horizontals and verticals in the cloud and pays Google and Apple 5 cents per rectangle. Just kidding about that last part!

smothered rug

82times_smothered_rug ludy mod

(modification by 82times of a drawing by Sara Ludy)

this version somewhat degraded by jpeg compression

Made using "add a pillow" app, an HTML5 cloud based program that pulls pillows from department store websites into your iPhone (TM) where they can be added to the artwork of your choice. Naw, just BS-ing--but it sounds plausible--coming soon to an "art and technology" website.

vintage net art that still works

screenshot of interactive work, Unfolding Object, by John F. Simon, Jr. (2002)
Guggenheim Museum

OK, nine years is too new to be vintage--thought it was older when the post title was written and now I don't want to change it. Also, not known is whether it works because it's been tinkered with to keep it functioning on current browsers. (Another Simon piece, Combinations, for example, was made before pop-up blockers.)

RIP, VVEBCAM

Ben Fino-Radin, the Victor Frankenstein of internet art, has just given 20,000 volts to another zombie artwork.
Petra Cortright's VVebcam was removed from YouTube because of her use of spam tags as art.
That's unfortunate because the spam was the least interesting aspect of the work.
(In 2007, before YouTube was bought by Google, it was funny to ironically draw traffic to your post through the use of sexual and other hot-button words. That landscape--the context of the artwork--has changed utterly, and Google's removal of the piece now validates it as a bit of 2007 idealism in need of cleaning up in the new corporate environment where color coded badges for workers are the norm.)
Who'd have guessed this YouTube-based artwork would be "taught in academic curricula" when I linked to it in Mar 2007. That post and a discussion four days later with Paddy Johnson probably doomed this guerrilla effort to a future of respectability but I have no regrets.
Trying to remake a piece that relies on "defaults" (YouTube + dancing webcam graphics that can still be seen in this Make magazine video--still on YouTube) isn't too exciting, though. Better if Fino-Radin just did a little homework, beyond looking at a Vice magazine interview from earlier this year, to document the piece through its contemporaneous accounts on the web. That's what we're doing here.