User:Lassebosch/reading writing methodologies/3 Trimester: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
Line 30: Line 30:


By examining vast amounts of stock-photos, certain two central 'parameters of success' was laid out; 1) Scale-ability 2) Emotional response
By examining vast amounts of stock-photos, certain two central 'parameters of success' was laid out; 1) Scale-ability 2) Emotional response


Scale-ability relates to the question of application; the more generic the content of the photo is, the more it sells. Examples:
Scale-ability relates to the question of application; the more generic the content of the photo is, the more it sells. Examples:

Revision as of 17:49, 5 May 2013

Draft for essay

KEY THEMES

the peer/seeder, sharing, stealing, inspiration, the mass/crowd, science of 'emergence', the sum of the crowd, exploitation vs empowerment, control, prediction, shaping future, systematic simplification - cybernetic perception, crowd-control, surveillance, mimicking/imitation - group, Freedom as an excuse for exploitation,


PREVIOUS RELEVANT WRITINGS

'Future Map', Brian Holmes

'The Peer', 2'nd chapter, Cyburbia, James Harkin

'The Long Tail' - Mark Leckey

'The Guardian Angel', Opinion, 2. trimester.

http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl/wiki/User:Lassebosch/reading_writing_methodologies/Annotations

http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl/wiki/User:Lassebosch/reading_writing_methodologies/2_Trimester


PREVIOUS WORKS

1) A Shutterstock Voyage (2012)

A growing personal fascination for stock-photography and video turned into a longer period of intense examination, working with and against the phenomenon. The project took shape as a expanding set of web-based tryouts, each experiment involving some sort of interaction.

By examining vast amounts of stock-photos, certain two central 'parameters of success' was laid out; 1) Scale-ability 2) Emotional response


Scale-ability relates to the question of application; the more generic the content of the photo is, the more it sells. Examples:

  • Most often stock photography refrains from depicting factual events. Instead it seeks portray particular moods, feelings or 'states of being' all known to western cultures: Success, happiness, melancholy, love, pain, etc.


2) Questioning Crowd-sourcing (2012-2013)

3) TumblrJumpr (2013)