Flickr Hits the Big Time at Pace/MacGill

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If Flickr hasn't already sucked away all your free time, you might want to check out the Selfportraitr (get it?! no E!) show at the Pace/MacGill gallery this week:

The exhibition will not only rely on the Flickr community for content, but will also depend upon the activity of the site’s users for the organization and editing of what is anticipated to be thousands of images from the age-old genre of self-portraiture. Whether the image is taken by a professional photographer overseas or by an amateur experimenting with a camera phone in New York City, each image posted on Flickr and “tagged” as a self-portrait will automatically be filtered and directed into the exhibition. The Pace/MacGill Flickr interface, created by SVA’s Jeremy Chien and Stephen Jablonsky and programmed by Kelvin Luck, allows users to vote for favorites, track the most viewed image, and create categories. Sorting options or subcategories (self portrait “with mirror” or at “beach,” for example) within the virtual exhibition will enable further definition and refinement.

The work in the exhibition will perpetually expand with the proliferation of users until the popularity of each category aids in its editing. As more images are collected and more users are interacting with the site to make selections, the work will become more discerning and interesting. One can choose the role they wish to assume: curator, artist, etcetera. With every click of the mouse, viewers become participants; the interactive community defines the exhibition. The hope is that the final result will be a 50 print exhibition of images chosen by the community.

The best part? You don't even have to go to the gallery to see the show-- you can check it out online here, or watch a slideshow version here. Or you could skip the show entirely and just browse the Flickr self-portrait tag-- it also comes in a NSFW version!

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Comments (2) [rss]

I just contributed to the exhibit.

Interesting... but Flickr reached its artistic height thanks to Jonathan Coulter's amazing video.

He stole images from Flickr, wrote a song about them, and then used them to make a video of the song. Truly incredible. Don't be frightened off by the cheesy first verse... it gets soooo good towards the end.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8060206257543341917

"strange balloon man has too much fun"

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