Making Mining Networking: Exhibition Extended, But Not For Long…

Tutorial_Level

Making Mining Networking went on display on April 20, 2015 at Duke University’s The Edge digital workspace. The show was originally scheduled to run until mid May, but it was extended several times until September 2015. After that, a few of the pieces are slated to be shown in Fall 2015 in an exhibit organized by the online journal Hyperrhiz: New Media Cultures and the Digital Studies Center at Rutgers University Camden.

In the meantime, however, it was reported in late May that the augmented reality platform we used to build the interactive components of our pieces had been sold – effectively putting an expiration date on our artworks. Metaio GmbH, makers of the popular Junaio AR browser and the underlying engine that allowed us to augment our QR-based paintings with videos, 3D objects, and HTML hyperlinks, were acquired by one of the biggest corporations in the business: Apple.

Even before the buyout was confirmed, rumors had started circulating after Metaio abruptly closed their community forums, cancelled their annual developers’ convention, and stopped selling their software and services. An ominous message went up on the Metaio website (metaio.com):

Metaio products and subscriptions are no longer available for purchase.

Downloads of your previous purchases will be available until December 15th, 2015, and active cloud subscriptions will be continued until expiration. Email support will continue until June 30th, 2015.

Thank you.

(No, thank you!) Lacking any explanation, users of the Metaio/Junaio AR platform were left to speculate about the future of their advertising campaigns, educational applications, and (as in our case) artworks.

Shortly thereafter, after the acquisition by Apple came to light, our worst fears were confirmed in the FAQs section on junaio.com. There we read:

Channel publishing to Junaio is no longer available. All existing channels will continue to be available until December 15th, 2015.

In other words, the pieces included in Making Mining Networking will no longer be functional at the end of the year. The QR codes painted on these canvases will no longer work; the pieces will then be flattened from the interactive physical/virtual assemblages they were designed to be and rendered into … paintings. Or worse, they will retain an executable dimension, albeit a non-operational one, and it will be supplemented by a weirdly representational dimension: effectively, these will then be paintings of 404 error codes.

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Like all of the pieces, “The Magical Marx-Markov Manifesto Maker” is therefore destined to lose its magic; the QR code, when scanned with a smartphone, will lead the user’s browser into virtual nothingness. On the other hand, though, pieces like “The Gold Standard” and “Gnomecrafting” might still have something to tell us – precisely because their non-operationality will render visible the inevitable entanglement of proprietary platforms and obsolescent objects that is the material heart and soul of digital capital.

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Making Mining Networking is (or was?) about probing the borders between the virtual and the physical – boundaries that are inscribed in stone (e.g. rare earths) as much as they are written in code. With our works, we have sought to invite users to experiment with this interface, opting for a playful approach to a space that we know is about deadly serious transactions (in the realms of capital and of the environment, to begin with). We installed our data gnomes at the physical/virtual border where they stood as talismans to ward off the bad spirits of digital capital – but we were never so naïve as to believe that they could really protect us for long. We still believe that we regained something of personal value by reclaiming our data from corporate mining and making something weird and inscrutable with it, but now a corporate transaction is about to render our productions invisible.

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Again, however, it is the seeming totality of such corporate power to make things invisible – to make all that’s solid melt into zeroes and ones – that is paradoxically made visible at this juncture, where links are inoperative, QR codes are non-functional, and paintings are not just paintings but paintings of such failure.

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Following our initial disappointment, then, we now now eagerly await the appointed date, our “doomsday” of December 15, 2015 – when the truth of Making Mining Networking will be revealed. Will it be a simple 404 message, or can we hope for something else to make manifest the physical/virtual interface as it exists in our era of climate change, high-speed finance, and the biopolitical mining of all that breathes and lives? Only time will tell…

In the meantime, these works exist as reminders of the expiration date that is implicitly inscribed in all of our devices – and, potentially, our very planet – at the hands of global digital capital. Play with them, think with them, experience with them – and await with us their obsolescence…

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The Gnomes of #Netcologies

The New Krass

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Karin + Shane Denson
20″ x 20″
Acrylic on canvas

This painting unlocks seven geolocated augmented reality (AR) gnomes that you can discover outside the building. Just follow the brief instructions that appear on your device after scanning the QR code. Enjoy your walk and share your screenshots on twitter with the hashtag #netcologies.

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Gnomecrafting

The New Krass

gnomecrafting_small

Karin + Shane Denson
20″ x 20″
Acrylic on Canvas

With some delay I’m going to present the last pieces from our exhibition “Making Mining Networking” at The Edge, Duke University, NC. Please use the junaio App to scan the image.

This piece thinks about the so-called “immaterial labor” of computation and gameplay, taking the popular game Minecraft as a thematic locus for reflecting on the way that contemporary platforms mine ludic activity, process it algorithmically, and transform leisure-time consumption into a new form of production or work. Mirroring this process, we have taken metadata generated while our son played online sessions of Minecraft and turned it into a new data gnome. In the augmented video that appears when you scan the painting, you’ll also see the first gnome we planted back into the Minecraft world.

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The Gold Standard

The New Krass

goldstandard-coins_frame

Karin + Shane Denson
30″ x 30″
Pennies on Canvas

The pennies arranged here form a functional QR code. The composition reflects on the dissolution of the gold standard and the transition to the fictitious capital of data-driven finance.

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It’s on display now through August at The Edge, Bostock Library, Duke University.

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“The Magical Marx-Markov Manifesto Maker”

The New Krass

MarxMarkovPainting-frame

Karin + Shane Denson
24″ x 24″
Acrylic on Canvas

This QR painting directs the user’s browser to a website that mines the text of “The Communist Manifesto” by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels from 1884. The piece uses Markov chains to process the text, allowing the user to generate new, sometimes humorous or surprising statements.

With the “juniao” app on your phone or tablet, you can scan this QR and check it out.

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Marx QR

The New Krass

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Karin + Shane Denson
24″ x 24″
Acrylic on Canvas

Upon scanning this QR painting, a digital rendering of a hand-sculpted Karl Marx Gnome appears in augmented space. The physical gnome, which is made out of solid concrete and can be seen in the window display to the left, was scanned with photogrammetric techniques and brought back into the digital realm as a 3D object. This piece, like all of the works collected in “Making Mining Networking,” reflects on the contemporary boundary between physical, virtual, and augmented spaces and seeks to link this theme with questions about “immaterial labor” and the mining of our digital activity.

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“Portrait of the Artist as a Data Cloud I + II” and “The 9”

The New Krass

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Portrait of the Artist
as a Data Cloud I +II

Karin + Shane Denson
20″ x 20″
Acrylic on canvas

These “Data Portraits” are data-generated objects based on personal Internet usage, processed with a custom Python script written by Luke Caldwell and hand-painted by Karin Denson. Scanning one of the nine QR codes on the right will unlock augmented reality (AR) scenarios that will be superimposed on the Data Portraits. The scenarios, some of which are interactive, explore various facets of contemporary interactions between physical, virtual, and augmented realities.

The 9

Karin + Shane Denson
20″ x 20″
Acrylic on canvas

Scan one of the 9 QR codes and point your device at the two “Data Portraits” on the left. Each of the QR codes triggers a different set of augmented reality (AR) contents on the Data Portraits. Experiment: try touching, listening to, or moving the objects on your screen.

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User-friendly Gnomes

The New Krass

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The big AR Gnome welcomes you to the “Making Mining Networking” exhibition at The Edge, Duke University. Today I added descriptions to the paintings so you can start your tour with your mobile device at any point of the exhibition. Nevertheless I still recommend  to start with the “Tutorial Level”:

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Tutorial Level

Karin + Shane Denson
20″ x 20″
Acrylic on Canvas

Scan this painting with your mobile device to get a brief tutorial on how to use the works collected here under the title “Making Mining Networking.” You’ll also find links and videos with context and background information about the processes and motivations behind the works.

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