Stories about a face that only a robot can see
A rare thing for "high concept" art -- Both the presentation of the book on the web and the book itself are quite attractive.
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From Benjamin Rosenbaum's blog:
So that art project that Ethan Ham and I did has shipped!
It's the first in a series of art objects produced by The Present Group, which says it's "like a mutual-fund that produces art instead of profits".
Ethan created a robot that trolled Flickr looking for his face. In the process, it found a number of "faces" that we wouldn't call faces. I wrote a series of interconnected stories based on those images.
So, stories about faces that only a robot can see.
There's a signed, limited edition of eighty handmade book-boxy things that subscribers to The Present Group got (you can still get one as a back issue). I signed 'em. With this special archival pen. It was a weird feeling, since I'm used to art that you make as many as you can of, not art that you constrain to a specific number of instances.
You can see what the book looks like here. (Keep clicking on it and it will unfold itself).
And the text of the stories I wrote is online here. (You have to click the little >> at the upper right to go to the next page).
The little green box with a line in it on each picture, shows where the robot found a face.
They also recorded me reading the stories, interviewed me and Ethan, comissioned a critical essay on the work, collected links to related works of art, and made sure the physical object will last for a century .
The audio and the text are CC'd, so you can redistribute them freely (and remix the audio), noncommercially and with attribution.
These people go all out.
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