User:Zpalomagar/PYRATECHNIC: Difference between revisions
Zpalomagar (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Zpalomagar (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
<gallery heights=200px mode="packed-hover"> | <gallery heights=200px mode="packed-hover"> | ||
File:DearData1. | File:DearData1.jpeg | ||
File:DearData2.png | File:DearData2.png | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> |
Revision as of 14:20, 2 November 2019
References
Dear Data
Dear Data is a year-long, analog data drawing project by Giorgia Lupi and Stefanie Posavec, two award-winning information designers living on different sides of the Atlantic.By collecting and hand drawing their personal data and sending it to each other in the form of postcards, they became friends.
Each week, and for a year, we collected and measured a particular type of data about our lives, used this data to make a drawing on a postcard-sized sheet of paper, and then dropped the postcard in an English “postbox” (Stefanie) or an American “mailbox” (Giorgia)!Eventually, the postcard arrived at the other person’s address with all the scuff marks of its journey over the ocean: a type of “slow data” transmission.
Over the fifty-two weeks, the collecting of data about our lives became a kind of ritual. We would spend the week noticing and noting down our activities or thoughts, before translating this information into a hand-drawn visualization.
On the front of the postcard there would be a unique representation of our weekly data, and, on the other side (in addition to the necessary postage and address), we would squeeze in detailed keys to our drawings: the code to enable the recipient to decipher the picture, and to fantasize about what had happened to her new friend the week before.
We prefer to approach data in a slower, more analogue way. We’ve always conceived Dear Data as a “personal documentary” rather than a quantified-self project which is a subtle – but important – distinction. Instead of using data just to become more efficient, we argue we can use data to become more humane and to connect with ourselves and others at a deeper level.
- DearData2.png