Manifeste on Flickr.Via Flickr:
Manifeste is located at Aire Banque Nationale, a public space on the corner of Amherst St. and St. Catherine St. E. in Montreal’s Ville-Marie, it is inspired by the last sentence of the Aires Libres manifesto written by Guy Corriveau: A time will come where you can express yourself freely.
Set in the heart of the Montreal’s Gay Village, Manifeste can only be revealed and decoded under certain angles. To read it, one must step backwards to Wolfe St., and then find the right angle. To fully experience it, one can leisurely penetrate its vertical forms, or thread one’s way through the tubes supporting the illuminating letters.  Night or day, Manifeste is a reminder that vital thoughts and reflections surround us without being noticed and that sometimes a slight change in perspective suddenly places us in front of what is apparent. On occasion, when we are not seeing the forest for the trees, the crown of high forest reveals a message of hope.
You can view a Photosynth of the installation here.

Manifeste on Flickr.

Via Flickr:
Manifeste is located at Aire Banque Nationale, a public space on the corner of Amherst St. and St. Catherine St. E. in Montreal’s Ville-Marie, it is inspired by the last sentence of the Aires Libres manifesto written by Guy Corriveau: A time will come where you can express yourself freely.

Set in the heart of the Montreal’s Gay Village, Manifeste can only be revealed and decoded under certain angles. To read it, one must step backwards to Wolfe St., and then find the right angle. To fully experience it, one can leisurely penetrate its vertical forms, or thread one’s way through the tubes supporting the illuminating letters. Night or day, Manifeste is a reminder that vital thoughts and reflections surround us without being noticed and that sometimes a slight change in perspective suddenly places us in front of what is apparent. On occasion, when we are not seeing the forest for the trees, the crown of high forest reveals a message of hope.

You can view a Photosynth of the installation here.

This installation by Erik Kessels is on show as part of an exhibition at Foam in Amsterdam that looks at the future of photography. It features print-outs of all the images uploaded to Flickr in a 24-hour period…

As you might imagine, this results in a lot of images, that fill the gallery space in an avalanche of photos. “We’re exposed to an overload of images nowadays,” says Kessels. “This glut is in large part the result of image-sharing sites like Flickr, networking sites like Facebook, and picture-based search engines. Their content mingles public and private, with the very personal being openly and un-selfconsciously displayed. By printing all the images uploaded in a 24-hour period, I visualise the feeling of drowning in representations of other peoples’ experiences.”

The aim of the What’s Next? exhibition is to provoke conversation about the future of the photography on the 10th anniversary of Foam. Looking at Kessels’ installation, it’s difficult not to feel nostalgic for photography’s past and to think of the sharing of all these images as a negative, a signal that we all need to exercise more editorial control. Yet, is that really the case? Perhaps sites such as Flickr, and the general ease of use provided by digital cameras, are instead encouraging us to think differently about photography, to see it as a truly democratic artform. Can there ever be too many images in the world?

What’s Next?, the Future of Photography Museum is on show at Foam in Amsterdam until December 7. Alongside Kessels’ installation, it also includes presentations from his fellow guest curators, Lauren Cornell, Jefferson Hack and Alison Nordström. More info on the show can be found here.

This is simply amazing; I upload to flickr almost daily, I wonder if one of my photos are in this pile somewhere. -chester @ cubcake photography

Statue of Squiddity - squid close up by Deadly Knitshade on Flickr.
Tentacles at the Top of the Rock -squid’s eye view by Deadly Knitshade on Flickr.Via Flickr:
A tiny stitched squid attempts to conquer New York City with his tentacles of terror.
See the whole tale over at Whodunnknit.

Tentacles at the Top of the Rock -squid’s eye view by Deadly Knitshade on Flickr.

Via Flickr:
A tiny stitched squid attempts to conquer New York City with his tentacles of terror.

See the whole tale over at Whodunnknit.