Upstream

Upstream

Generative art created with public tweets

2020 New York, NY Student Work

About

Upstream is a series of generative visuals rendered with public available tweets during 2020 quarantine, representing the fluid nature of modern identity as language, space and protocol.

Upstream Image 1

On Metaphor

The early developments of computation centered on the idea of recreating virtual representation of the physical world, the idea of metaphors became ubiquitous ever since then. Because of that, text became the cornerstone of virtual worlds.

Computer is a machine that can imitate, and thus substitute for, all others based on its programming.

- Wendy Hui Kyong Chun

Later in the 80s when computation made its way into pop culture and sci-fi literatures, the idea of the physical world being built like a computer program and consisted of codes/text gained a lot of attention. Making the very concept of metaphor works both ways as a loop.

When text became a prominent element of both worlds, the existence of modern social media after Web2.0 accelerated the process of identity fragmentation. People can now be broken down to things they follow, catchphrases they use in DMs, etc. The hosting platforms flattens the discourses, presenting a homogenized reality, blurring the line between of different individuals.

Prototypes

The prototypes kicked off with the following image attempting to recreate a virtual space with just texts.

This version served as a snapshot of ones peripheral surrounding, of which I decided to go off from here and test with different renditions to create the visual language of identity.

Upstream Image 12

The following iterations all involved with public tweets as rendering materials and focus on the shape of the self.

Upstream Image 1
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The certainty that everything has already been written annuls us, or renders us phantasmal.

- Jorge Luis Borges Upstream Image 5

Body as language

We are languages, like the library in Borges’s story, people don’t create words, we discover them, and all that we know are through metaphors, to echo Mcluhan, when we are languages, we can be broken down into words, alphabets, ultimately reshape with others, merge with the surroundings. Body as language is in itself a phantasm.

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