Felix Stalder on Wed, 26 Feb 2003 19:23:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Onewordmovie: an internet-based installation |
One Word Movie An Internet-based project by Beat Brogle +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ + March 06, 20:00 at [plug.in]: «onewordmovie» Opening: Presentation of + the Project and Prototype +Installation by the artist. + March, 7 - 23 «onewordmovie» at the [plug.in] Wed - Sun 14-18 Uhr + Starting 7. March «onewordmovie» Onlineversion accessible under: + www.onewordmovie.ch. Preview-Version for the Media 27. February: + www.xcult.ch/onewordmovie + www.youplugin.org / office@iplugin.org + St. Alban-Rheinweg 64 + CH 4052 Basel / Switzerland + Tel. ++41 (0) 61 283 60 50 / Fax. 51 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ About the Project ============================================================================ One Word Movie From a world of images to an image of the world. «One Word Movie» is an on-line platform which organizes, based on user-supplied terms, the flood of images on the Internet into an animated film. A word turns into images, images turn into a movie. Using a specially programmed search engine, users can call up images from the Internet which match their search term. The project's search engine is built on top of the most popular image search facilities available on the Internet. Supplied with a search term, the engine produces first a «hit list». This list can be several thousand images long, depending on the term. The images on this «hit list» provide the «raw material» for the movie. Following the ranking on the «hit list», the images are animated into a film in real-time, following a fixed and predetermined score, which consists of series of interwoven loops. Each film has an individual trailer, displaying the search term as the title and each film lasts until the «raw material» is used up. This project plays with the tension between on-line and cinematic approaches to images. Consequently, it functions as well online as in real space. Hence, it will be presented in two versions: as browser-based application and as an installation. The on-line version is accessible via a normal internet connection and standard browser at http://www.onewordmovie.ch. The installation, closer to the cinematic experience, consists of three video projections onto three screens. On-line version Like with any search engine, the user enters a search term into a web form. The engine then collects images from its database and creates a hit list. This happens in the background, invisible to the user. Based on this hit list, a film is being created and streamed in real-time over the Internet to the user. The server can handle several streams, hence several users, in parallel. Each film will be generated instantaneously using the latest images from the web. Installation The central spatial element of the installation is a triptych consisting of three screens, each showing a different data projection. Each projection is one animated film, hence the user can see up to three films in parallel. The installation creates a cinematic situation, i.e. the projections dominate an otherwise darkened room. In this room, in addition to the screens, there is also a control monitor which indicates which search term each movie is based on. Even though the situation is cinematic, the audience is not passive. Rather, the control monitor also allows users to enter their own search terms, hence directly influence, though not fully control, the films that are shown. The installation consists of three projections so that the users can relate the different streams to one another and thus explore yet another level of Internet-specific image-word relationships. One can imagine, for example, that the same search term entered in different languages creates different films, or that two words whose meaning is very similar are associated with very different image clusters. The best context for the presentation of the installation are media festivals, galleries or museums. These institutions still struggle with the question how to integrate the Internet into their traditional exhibition spaces without recreating the individualizing situation - one machine = one user - that we all know from the office or home use of the computer. The installation version of the project can help to overcome this difficulty by choosing a format that is adapted to the exhibition spaces as much as it is to the Internet. Discussion ============================================================================ The set-up - create a film according to predetermined score - has a certain kinship to the structural film of the 1960s and 1970s. There, as in this case, the role of the individual author is minimized, without ever disappearing completely. It shifts from the selection of images and scenes to the creation of an algorithm that guides the selection. In «One Word Movie» the remaining fragments of authorship are split again, into those pertaining to the author of the set-up and those pertaining to the user who initiates a particular search. However, such similarities to conventional (experimental) film are outweighed by differences and these differences are the actual core of the project. They stem from the altered status that images have online and the strong influence of the specifics of the technologies employed. The strong and influential particulars of the technology relate to the fact that a semantic search strategy is employed to solve what is - from a human perspective - a pictorial search problem. Instead of analyzing images according to the visual content, as humans do, the machine is searching for semantic terms which appear either in the image's file name or in the text closely associated with it. This approach to image searching is the most widely used today, including the large commercial image search engines. All attempts to analyze visual content automatically have failed so far. One program to look for pornographic images, for example, the «naked people finder», was searching for colors resembling that of naked (white) people and analyzed the shapes of these colors. Two pink cylinders, say, were interpreted as two naked extremities. The search precision, however, was too low to be of any use. Particularly often, images of desserts were misidentified as pornography. The project is no longer continued.1 Because of such non-trivial challenges to automatic content analysis of images, it is highly likely that the semantic approach currently used will remain predominant for quite some time. No matter how adequate it may be, it is the way most people will search for images. It makes little sense to critique it, since there is no alternative available. One Word Movie explores its ramifications. Two questions come to the fore: What is the relationship between the file name and the image content and, secondly, what kind of selection is being made, supposedly representing our search interest? The question that has figured prominently in modern art - the relationship between image and text - is posed anew, this time a practical and urgent one, directly affecting the habits of millions of Internet users. The fast-paced sequences of the images appear to the viewer initially as random. The human cognition, focusing on image content, has a hard time understanding the machine's selection criteria. There's a fundamental disconnect. As little, or as well, as we cannot infer the file name from the image content, the machine cannot infer the image content from the machine. However, these flickering images contain rich cultural information. As an example, the film visualizing the search term «me» contains patterns that are revealing the current state of (online) culture. The majority of images we see are of young white males, females appear only after a while and non-whites even later. Intermixed with this quite expected standard imagery is a surprising number of x-rays and CT scans offering new, highly technological views on the individual body. A lot of people apparently take these images as good representations of themselves, which we can assume since they call the file "me" or associate the term closely to the image. This implies the question how far new visualization technologies are changing the view on the human body. The film suggests, this is not only a problem affecting some specialists, but changing perceptions of the (online) population at large. What is particularly striking is that there seems to be such trust that these complex, heavily mediated images are indeed good representations of an individual person. The flood of images that «One Word Movie» channels into a movie are at the same time without meaning - they haven't been assembled by a cognitive subject - and full of unintended meaning if viewed by a perceptive person. The lack of meaning is heightened by the difficulties of a semantic image search in a non-semantically classified image pool. Despite certain similarities, the Internet does in this regard not resemble a structured library or an archive. The meaning of the images lies not in the individual image - which, after all, passes by so quickly that it can barely be detected - but the patterns that this high-speed view of image groups reveal. This is a cognitive mode quite typical for the electronic culture. McLuhan understood this clearly when we wrote: Information pours upon us, instantaneously and continuously. As soon as information is acquired, it is very rapidly replaced by still newer information. Our electrically-configured world has forced us to move from the habit of data classification to the mode of pattern recognition.2 «One Word Movie» forces us, who are used to look for narration, to shift our perception. In these films, there is nothing narrative, even if we tend to detect some fragments of a narration from time to time. But any narration rests on a narrative intention, which we cannot assume a machine to have. However, if we are able to free ourselves from this search for narration, we can explore hidden informational patterns. The flickering films open our view on to a hidden «psychogeography» of the Internet. Technology ============================================================================ Input of search terms and search parameters and output of the animated movies are delivered in standard web browsers - like e.g. Netscape or Internet Explorer - on the computer of the viewer of One Word Movie. The One Word Movie application has active components on three levels: a shockwave application in the browser of the viewer, a script on the web server and the image search engine of Google. After the web page with the embedded shockwave application is loaded, an input field for the search term is displayed, along with different options like play-speed, image repetition, image size and image-loop length. By clicking on the search button, the search term is sent to a script on the web server which transmits the term to the Google image search. The results page from Google is parsed and interpreted by the script to extract the image URL's which then are sent back to the shockwave application. The application is loading the images from the internet to the computer of the viewer and standardizes the images since they exist in different formats and sizes on the web. On the interface of the application the growing animation can be viewed. In the background, invisible to the user, new images from the Internet and new image URLs from Google are loaded and inserted constantly into the animation. The image search itself and the transfer of the images from the Internet take place with a certain delay, wherefore the beginning movie is only a few images long but grows up to the full length within seconds. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold