The Analog Art of Digital Dystopia
Why we need to trust big data opening a door to an individual creative mindset instead of dooming it.
This vernissage placed within a loft in Munich is an attempt to show how big data can be translated into art. I’m surprised by the level of non-digital craftsmanship. Mostly pictures at a wall, neon-illuminated objects in darkness and changing lights. I could touch it all if I wanted to. But can algorithms, analysis and some color condensed into physcial form actually transform big data into art?
Well, it can. That’s the short answer by digital natives like me. Who love the pretty-sophisticated-artsy way of treating digitalized personal information. Like when we text each other on Whatsapp, tweet across boundaries and share locations on Facebook.
Those of us — call us naive digital butterflies — don’t see first and foremost the NSA, like the German public sphere does at the moment. We do see data thieves drawn by gold or wrought patriotism. (So, stop watching us!) But we also see beauty in big data.
It can even visualize where our information highways lie. And where there is a geo tweet desert.
Thus big data, in form of old-fashioned analog art,actually manages to teach us a lesson about our digital society.
One step we can all take is to fight back the frightening dystopia of an all-knowing narrator of our private online lives. While accepting the open global stage that is social media.
At least, I know I am an actor in my public digital sphere. Aren’t you?