Frogger GIF
10 years ago
this is a blog, feel free to feed the fish
The first artist I upon whom I decided to reflect on the blog is Bradley Carter. I came across his work through the New Museum's rhizome.org website. I was particularly interested in looking at interactive web art for the first piece, because it was a facet of digital media art that really fascinated me. Narrowing down the vast amount of works in the catalogue through the "interactive art" tag, I came across Carter's work Ballentine, and was really intrigued by it. Ballentine is a drawing of a bird that Carter created very recently--in December using Photoshop. He is approximately 20,000 pixels tall and 30,000 pixels wide, which Carter says puts him at about twenty feet by thirty feet at seventy-two pixels per inch resolution. The thing that I found which makes this piece really exceptional is that Carter created every single pixel of the bird using one pixel scribble lines of only red, white, yellow, blue and black colors. After the last class, and seeing how absolutely tiny a one-pixel scribble line is, I was really amazed at the amount of work that Carter put in to the piece. The work is in fact, so large that Carter coded it into an API environment similar to Google Maps so that viewers of the work can zoom in and pan the image to really investigate it. Carter, on his own blog, describes the internet as Ballentine's "natural environment." Since Pepperdine, I've been interested in Internet art. A painter or draftsman by trade, I wondered specifically what an "Internet drawing" should look like. I'm not talking about uploading photographs of static drawings made in the physical world. Rather I'm interested in drawings that use the Internet itself as a medium... like charcoal or graphite. Think of the possibilities: interactivity, infinite duplication and sharing, and unlimited size to name a few. The definition of drawing that I prefer to work with is "A mark that transforms a ground." By this definition, a website could most certainly be considered a drawing.I really find it interesting that he's such an advocate of free, interactive art via the internet, and especially his relationship as an artist to the internet and the affordances it's provided him.