art, bfa show, glitch, Photography

Error in the System

My senior project is no longer “evolving” as I had my show on May 9th at the Urban Arts Center. Thanks to everyone who could make it! To those who couldn’t, here’s a closer look at my pieces.

Error in the System

Born somewhere in between Generation X and the Millennials, my generation is the last to experience a purely analog world – a world without terminals on the desktop and a world in which research required a visit to the library. We are in contrast the first generation to have home computers and personal cell phones. As technology transformed, we grew up.

Computers today are able to run endless simulations, seemingly infinite ones and zeros. The Simulation Hypothesis asserts that we are, in fact, designed as part of a computer simulation. With computing speed doubling exponentially every four years, The Simulation Hypothesis is becoming increasingly plausible.

Taking into consideration the state the world is today, perhaps humanity only has so long before our digital coders decide we’re a hopeless disaster and that our design is so flawed that the Simulation itself begins to break down. Data rot, the gradual degradation of digital storage media, is unavoidable.

How will humanity deal with this inevitable digital deterioration?

In response to our decay I create photographs inspired by dreams and data-bend, or break, the photographic source code by merging it with code from literature, song lyrics, notes, or the musical code itself. In this way I am able to see through the digital fog to return to my own reality. Simulation or no.

01Am I asleep. Have I slept._MG_2857-1_glitch Final

02Becoming ghosts to dream of and pass on_MG_8990top

03Did you ever wonder why we had to run for shelter when the promise of a brave new world unfuried beneath a clear blue sky_MG_1576-1 copy copyb

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art, bfa show, glitch

Senior project

Photos for my evolving senior project. Show in May 2015 at the Urban Arts Space.

Error in the System

Born in 1983, my generation is the last generation to experience a purely analog world. We are the last generation to remember a world without terminals on the desktop and computers in the classroom.  We are the last generation who researched with books at the library and used the card catalog.  At the same time we are the first generation to have home computers used by the whole family and the first generation to save our school projects on floppy discs.  Technology evolved with us as we grew up.

In the span of human history, only recently have we looked beyond our analog world, the “real life.” Despite that, every four years, since the 1950s, the world’s computing power has doubled exponentially and we have developed systems that run simulations to test anything from the atomic level to galaxy wide. The Simulation Hypothesis asserts that we are, in fact, in one of those computer simulations.  

On the local level, I believe humanity is finally realizing their potential in this simulation.  A decade ago we were buying our first personal cell phones. A decade from today we will communicate via microchips installed under our skin via our thoughts.

However, humanity most likely only has so long before either our digital coders decide we’re a hopeless disaster and cancel the simulation or the code is flawed and begins to break itself down. How can humanity deal, emotionally and intellectually, with this inevitable digital deterioration?

“Against the destruction of the world, there is only one defense: The creative act.” – Kenneth Rexroth

I deal the only way I know how, I create.  I create photographs that I believe can help me see through the digital fog in which we exist in the struggle to stay human.  While glitching the code in my photographs I am creating my own reality. Experiencing music is another way to creating a reality and the code I insert into the photographs comes from the music, in lyrics, notes, or the musical code itself.  The original photographs are inspired by another reality creation, dreams. In sub consciousness the mind creates dreams to try and grasp what little what little sense the world offers. Though, are dreams merely an extension of the simulation?

In presentation I would like to display twelve, 12” photographs in groupings of three framed on the wall.  The “twelve inch” is the standard LP album and the music I believe that the music I glitch my photographs with is an equal participant in the final creation.

 

Burnadette Goodbye Blue Sky Ashes to Ashes