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Identinet / re-fresh:/circumstance/choice/chance / 2002

IDENTINET

Nick Crowe / Lucy Kimbell / Erika Tan / Jananne Al-Ani

https://www.fvu.co.uk/projects/identinet

 

If television is, to a large extent, a mirror of the society it represents, today’s complex, multi-channel reality reflects back a mosaic of different, parallel identities. The picture has been fragmented even further by the arrival of the internet (and, most recently, by the rise of social media). This project, dating from 2002, measured and anticipated some of these changes. Multi-platform in its nature, it consisted of four commissions in which an ongoing online presence was accompanied by a short film on each of the artists that was broadcast on Channel 4. Lucy Kimbell expanded her LIX Index initiative (first seen in FVU’s ‘Slipstream’ from 2001). A meticulous year-long survey of her personal, physical and professional highs and lows, benchmarked against a number of playful but unbending ‘performance indicators’, it offered a pre-echo of an increasing fascination with the symbols, and fluctuations, of individual worth and status that would be manifested not long after in the BBC’s Celebdaq and Sportsdaq games.

Nick Crowe’s Avatars commission was similarly ahead of the curve. Delighting in the cartoonish, exaggerated guises by which people chose to display themselves in online chat-rooms, Crowe introduced a new set of off-the-peg identities modeled on more everyday subjects. Erika Tan’s Re-fresh_ was a comment on an accelerating desire for novelty, and a digital facility for customisation and personalisation. Tracing the different permutations of a palette of screensaver options, Tan’s piece played with aesthetic associations and cultural stereotypes around colour. Evoking a game of Chinese Whispers, Jananne Al-Ani’s Tell/Tale located identity within the orbit of the family, while subtly highlighting its mutable, interdependent nature.

Identinet was commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella in collaboration with Arts Council England and Channel 4 Television. The project was supported by the New Audiences Fund of the Arts Council of England. The online commissions were created in conjunction with a series of individual artist profiles (produced by Maverick Television) broadcast on Channel 4 as part of The Slot during April 2002.

re-fresh/circumstance/choice/chance

http://identinet.fvu.co.uk/tan/tanIndex.html

Erika Tan's work explores ideas of cultural identity, cultural difference, transgression and translation. Her work for identinet consists of a series of downloadable screensavers and other accessories through which the user can customise the desktop of their computer. Although their original function was to protect and refresh the computer screen, screensavers are now available in endless permutations that allow people free rein to express their individuality. By encouraging users to consider a complete makeover of their computer screen, Tan highlights both the surface nature of the changes and the underlying codes and patterns that determine genetic and cultural identity.

re-fresh:/circumstance/choice/chance was produced in collaboration with Ian Kerrigan, Karl Bunyan and Nadine Kennedy from dna.

re-fresh_: screen savers, wallpaper, icons as metaphors to individuality, personal choice, novelty, image exploration and plurality. If 'identity' is seen as something that is fluid, strategic, experimental, temporally contrived, as something that one creates within boundaries (cultural contexts/operating systems/genetic and DNA coding), as something navigated between the prescribed and projected, the 'default' and the 'customised' - then the whole area of computer interfacs, the digitally built environment, becomes an activated site, a hotbed, a hyper-sensitised culturally and racially loaded arena.

 

Examples of animated screen savers on the right.

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