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see [phage]
in NZ
"Like such artist-made browsers as I/O/D's Web
Stalker and Maciej Wisniewski's Netomat, Mary Flanagan's _Phage_
offers an alternative visualization of electronic information--but
instead of browsing the Internet, it browses your hard drive. A
downloadable Director program that thinks it's a psychoanalyst,
_Phage_ dredges up random images, texts, and sounds from the nooks
and crannies on your C drive. You'll be surprised what's lurking
in the depths of your computer's unconscious."
--Jon Ippolito June 2000 - Juror Statement, netArt 2000
artist, Curator Media Arts, Guggenheim Museum, NYC
[phage]
is a computer application which is viral-- an artificial life form.
[phage] filters through all available material on a specified workstation
and places it in an alternate context-a visible and audible moving
3D spatialized world. I encourage this virus lifeform to spread
via email (but only by the consent of the host).
The
project explores the permeable and viral nature of digital data
and our relationship, as users, to both the data and the machine.
By mapping a userâs unique experiences-- through images, downloads,
web sites visited, emails--the computer program creates spatial
memory maps that not only reflect the computer and technoculture
in content, but the user's artifacts from his or her interactions.
In this way, the [phage] program reflects each user as an individual.
The work, in fact, becomes about the user's experience with the
particular computer.
[phage] creates new living sculptures from our own data, thus mixing
ideas of authorship between programmer, operating system, and users.
It eradicates gender-based notions previously associated with the
life creating process, and it questions the command and control
paradigms which created the computer in the first place. [phage]
creates a feminist map of the machine through its non-hierarchical
organization and its divorce of creative control (and reproductive
control) from the user. [phage] allows the user to experience his
or her computer memory as a palimpsest of his or her own life experiences
rather than know the computer as simply a tool for daily use.
The title of [phage] plays upon the coded word "virus"-- referring
to a bacteriophage, a constructive human virus that preys on harmful
bacteria. Phage, from the Greek phagein, meaning "to eat."
[phage] was created in Macromedia Director and is available for
download below. It
will do no harm to your system. It takes time to scan the system
at first, so have patience if you have immense hard drives. Download
[phage] for pc now!
-Click
here for the compressed winzip format (1.9MB, must be uncompressed
to run)
-Click here for the uncompressed .exe (about
3MB)
Read
paper about [phage].
This project was a winner in the DIGITAL
2000 International Competition & Exhibition sponsored by
Art & Science Collaborations, Inc. (ASCI)
..."The
human mind does not work that way. It operates by association. With
one item in its grasp, it snaps instantly to the next that is suggested
by the association of thoughts, in accordance with some intricate
web of trails carried by the cells of the brain. It has other characteristics,
of course; trails that are not frequently followed are prone to
fade, items are not fully permanent, memory is transitory. Yet the
speed of action, the intricacy of trails, the detail of mental pictures,
is awe-inspiring beyond all else in nature."
--vannevar
bush, as we may think 1945
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[phage] has been exhibited in
New York (Silic, Auckland, and
Christchurch, among other places.

[phage] running at the Guggenheim
in NYC, 2004, as part of the
Seeing Double exhibition. The same program runs in its
original
Win98 Operating system, in WinXP, and in emulation on the mac.


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