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[December 18th 2002]
exhibition

Electrohype 2002
At the beginning of October 2002, the
first Nordic biennial for computer-based art was held in Malmö,
and naturally, kopenhagen.dk was on the spot. Here is a selection
of the works. Enjoy! Text and photo: Kristine Ploug
Electrohype 2002
23. - 27. October
Carolinahallen
Östergatan 7, Malmö
and
Malmö Konsthall
St. Johannesgatan 7, Malmö
www.electrohype.org
Contributing artists: Laura Beloff / Erich
Berger (Finland / Austria), Andrew C. Bulhak (Australia), Rikard
Lundstedt (Sweden), Ellen Røed (Norway), Oncotype / Subsilo
/ Dinsen / Christiansen (Denmark), C. Anders Wallén (Sweden),
John F. Simon, Jr. (USA), Marek Walczak / Martin Wattenberg (USA),
Magnus Wassborg (Sweden), Thomas Broomé (Sweden), Helen
Evans / Heiko Hansen (France), Lisa Jevbratt (Sweden), Federico
Muelas (Spain), Paul Smith / Vicky Isley (UK), Gisle Frøysland
(Norway), Victor Vina (UK)
Thomas Broomé
HellHunt by Thomas Brommé was one of
the truly entertaining works at Electrohype 2002. HellHunt is
a paranoid program placed on a computer that searches the internet
for diabolism in the form of the symbol of the devil, the pentagram.
HellHunt finds images on the internet and looks for angles which
- if a line is drawn between them - make up a pentagram. When
HellHunt has found something, it saves the destination and sends
them a friendly e-mail with an urgent request to dispose of the
devilry. And often, HellHunt's pinpointing of diabolism is very
surprising - while kopenhagen.dk was there, a pentagram was found
in an angle between the Eiffel tower and some trees!
 
Thomas Broomé
(Smart Studio, Sweden): HellHunt
Lisa Jevbratt
The work by Swedish Lisa Jevbratt, Out of the Ordinary,
was an interface to the controversial surveillance software Carnivore,
created by Radical Software Group, a software group under the
internet portal Rhizome,
and it can be downloaded for free. But even though Carnivore and
Jevbratt's interfaces make for a fascinating and frightening project,
it never becomes as interesting to watch it in an exhibition as
it must be to monitor your local network! See more of Lisa Jevbratt
at www.jevbratt.com
Lisa Jevbratt (Sweden):
Out of the Ordinary
John F. Simon, Jr.
For Electrohype 2002, American Simon contributed two works
that were both based on the same concept, little flat screens
with graphic patterns in movement. One of the works, Every
Icon, is divided into a multitude of black and white squares,
and at first glance it is quite boring, but actually the software
behind it is trying out all existing combinations of the black
and white squares. According to Simon's calculations, there are
4,3 billion combinations, and it would take the work sixteen months
to go through all of them. The work runs completely mechanically,
but to the viewer, occasionally recognisable icons and patterns
turn up, and to Simon, that is the what is fascinating: that programming
can actually create something that is recognisable to humans.
See more of John F. Simon, Jr. at
www.numeral.com

John F. Simon, Jr.
(USA) : Every Icon og Color Panel v1.0
Laura Beloff / Erich Berger
Spinne is German for spider. In addition, the work is based
on the web metaphor: web understood as the World Wide Web of the
internet and as cobweb. The work consists of four large, physical,
constructed spiders and four web spiders that search the internet
for pre-defined words. When the web spiders find something, they
react by making a sound. Read more about the work at www.saunalahti.fi
 
Laura Beloff and Erich Berger (Austria):
Spinne
Andrew C. Bulhak
The postmodernism machine generates large amounts of
text that is complete nonsense. Anyone who has frequented the
institutions of higher education will recognise something, and
it is quite a lot of fun. You can also try it online www.elsewhere.org
 
Andrew C. Bulhak (Austria):
The Postmodernism Generator
Ellen Røed
At the basis, the work consists of nothing. An empty,
white room. But when anyone enters the room, they are filmed and
projected onto the wall. At the same time, all sound is recorded,
and, having passed through a computer, it is transformed into
different letters, whose colour and size depend on the sound.
Ellen Røed
(Norway): Feedback
Oncotype / Subsilo / Dinsen / Christiansen
The Danish element of the exhibition consisted of a
large screen and a microphone. Loads of statistic information
about the Danes runs across the screen, but when anybody speaks
into the microphone, the statistics are interrupted by a person
who tells a very personal story.
Oncotype / Subsilo / Dinsen / Christiansen
(Denmark): Rekyl
Marek Walczak / Martin Wattenberg
The work is a large screen, placed horizontally as
a table, and a computer keyboard. When something is typed on the
keyboard, it shows up on the screen as ordinary text and at the
same time generates rooms in the apartment. Notice the text
Try for yourself online at turbulence.org
  
Marek Walczak og Martin
Wattenberg (USA): Apartment
Magnus Wassborg
The two intelligent - according to Wassborg - figures
are hacked into behaving psychotically
Try it live at www.inthecomputer.org

Magnus Wassborg (Sweden):
FulHack
Rikard Lundstedt
You were given a set of headphones, and by manipulating
a joystick you could navigate through a minimalistic virtual landscape
consisting of luminous lines against a black background. At the
same time, the movements of the joystick created a series of sounds,
and in all its simplicity it was a rather fascinating experience.
Rikard Lundstedt (Sweden):
Sound Room
C. Anders Wallén
jour et nuit had a curious effect on the experience
of the exhibition. It consisted of a computer projection on the
back wall of one of the white booths that divided the exhibition
in Carolinahallen, as well as a number of sensors. On first looking
into the booth, you would see a man standing, but when you stepped
into the booth, the man left and did not return until you stepped
out again. It was a really odd social experience to have the work
of art flee from you!
C. Anders Wallén
(Sweden): jour et nuit
Translated by Nina Jagd Andersen
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