Archive for b-wired

Crowdsourcing Art Opinions

// August 10th, 2010 // View Comments // b-wired

Art is the most subjective thing on the planet so discussing it is vital, and equally pointless! It depends on how passionate you are about any specific work of art. Given you have the opinion and passion, the über intelligent dudes at Digit London have developed a revolutionary way to Crowdsource comments on art. It involves bar codes and smart phones (read more). They started on the street and have now taken the tech indoors.

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Surely every gallery needs this; especially the big boys. Tate, Guggenheim & Armoury could all build online communities around the social aspect. It’s gotta be the future for a participatory exhibition experience. Videos, blog posts, photos and online art all use a commenting system. The matrix gets a step closer to our physical world…

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Crowdsourcing Blogs | The Tom Tom Debacle

// July 20th, 2010 // View Comments // b-inspired, b-wired

Today’s crowdsourced blog comes from an awesome brain feeder called Rebel Art. This hilarious, surreal & original short film “crossroads (what to do)” by Garvin Nolte deals with the influence of others on one’s own path of life in an abstract way…..v.cool

Download this awesome free wallpaper here

crowdsourcing blogs http://b-uncut.com/blog

Crowdsourcing Art | Google undertakes crowdsourced film project

// July 7th, 2010 // View Comments // b-scene, b-wired

So Google follows YouTube in a globally crowdsourced art/people project. Not surprising seeing as they’re one and the same virtual beast these days. Anyhoo it’s still a fun bit of Web 2.0 art to get involved in. A BIG BUT…as Google are the main benefactors from this process, surely rewarding the chosen contributors would complete the karma circle and also fulfil the Web 3.0 paradigm.

Another point to bear in mind: Google’s premise of a “global” view of the world sadly omits at least a sixth of the world’s population….

Sometimes Google takes a break from its mission of ‘organizing all the world’s information’ and decides to embark upon an artsy project that encapsulates…organizing all the world’s information.

Late on Tuesday, the search giant posted an entry to the Official Google Blog announcing the creation of “Life In A Day,” a film project that solicits video submissions from YouTube users around the world–the criteria is that they must capture some kind of moment filmed on July 24.

It’s legit. “Touching The Void” director Kevin Macdonald will edit “the most compelling footage” into a documentary film executive-produced by Ridley Scott of “Blade Runner” and “Gladiator” fame. It will be shown at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, all contributors who make it into the final cut will be credited as “co-directors,” and 20 of them will be invited to the premiere.

But, the Google blog post explains, everyone’s important! “Regardless of whether your footage makes it into the final film, your video(s) will live on on the ‘Life in a Day’ channel as a time capsule that will tell future generations what it was like to be alive on July 24, 2010,” the post by product marketing manager Tim Partridge read.

If this sounds familiar, it’s because the “crowdsourced 24-hour project” is old hat. The Yahoo-owned photo sharing site Flickr amassed user submissions from around the world on May 5, 2007 and eventually put selections into a self-published book. This spring, The New York Times’ photo blog, The Lens, organized a similar project and published the results in a visually stunning infographic–titling it in Times-appropriate fashion, “A Timely Global Mosaic, Created By All Of Us.” To Google’s (and Ridley Scott’s) credit, this time it’s actually on film as opposed to in the form of a gigantic photo collection.

It’s also part of Google’s ongoing appeal to the independent and amateur filmmaking community. Last year, it used the Sundance Film Festival as the kickoff event for its fledgling movie rental service, and continues to court industry professionals who may otherwise have been under the impression that YouTube is best for grainy videos of cats chasing laser pointers.

via c-net

Crowdsourcing Art | Best Free iPhone 4 Art Wallpapers

// July 5th, 2010 // View Comments // Eyes on the Crowd, b-wired

Here are 6 awesome art iPhone wallpapers for your new iPhone 4. These fantastic wallpapers were hand selected from the great range of entries in our crowdsourced art community. The entries were so cool we were inspired to create our own! To download the best free art wallpapers for the iPhone 4 just click here.

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Click here to download these awesome iPhone 4 wallpapers for FREE.

Historypin: Crowdsourcing the biggest digital photo archive in the world.

// July 5th, 2010 // View Comments // b-inspired, b-wired

Crowdsourcing excels as a content creation and distribution model, just look at Wikipedia. International art projects, social activism and now the UK government are all employing crowdsourcing to excel productivity. NOW Historypin is utilising this social media phenomenon to create the biggest user-generated digital photo archive in the world. Crowdsourced photographs are synced with Google maps and hey presto, a geo-search-photo-archive-engine for everyone. This opens new doors for artists. Surely painters and photographers from past and present can exhibit on the new platform for exposure delivering crowdsourced art to the History pin mix.


The idea has gargantuan potential. They’re calling it a “digital time machine” and, this being the age of Wikiality, anyone can contribute. What’s history? Whatever you pin. Selfridges and M&S have both released their archives to the site giving Historypin a rolling start & no doubt giving the two establishments an intelligent method of ambient advertising.


It is early days but developments with augmented reality could rocket Historypin’s possibilities to a remarkable dimension. Imagine taking a walk around a city or ruin, accessing a deep interactive historic tour spanning from your present contribution back……

Snapshot Brighton | A Crowdsourced Art & Curation Competition

// July 1st, 2010 // View Comments // b-Crowd, b-scene, b-wired

Another Web 2.0 art project utilising crowdsourcing emerges! Snapshot Brighton is an open submission, open judging photographic crowdsourcing competition. Submit your photos and images of Brighton and Brighton life. Rate what you see on the site, viewers are the judges! The project has just started and is open for submissions and ratings until October 2010. The highest rated photos or images will win prizes! As we know artists are our pure pioneers, freely exploring the unknown long before business has the bottle. Turns out crowdsourcing art is  b-uncut’s speciality. We now have a network of over 1800 artists and offer artists a commercial gateway for their talents. Art directors, interior designers, curators and collectors use our unique Commission Art™ system to buy art from our panoptic artist community rapidly and cost effectively. We use an ethically responsible and sustainable crowdsourcing model ensuring a fair trade for all our artists.

Crowdsourcing Art and Artists: From Web 2.0 to Web 3.0

// June 24th, 2010 // View Comments // b-Crowd, b-wired

Many art projects have found their inspiration from the spirit of social media and crowdsourcing (just see this post). Crowdsourced web 2.0 works of art have now been created cross-borders, cultures and genres. But what’s next for this wikolution? Our leap from web 2.0 —-> 3.0 is the translation from fun & novel projects —-> harnessing and monetising this effective & efficient social production. Welcome to b-uncut; the art agent 3.0. Mobilising all the power and beauty of the art collective 2.0, b-uncut has been forming the most comprehensive art agency the world has ever known.

Over 1800 artists with diverse skills are available NOW to produce the next Le Mans BMW or Louis Vuitton sculpture. Our crowd is a wealth of experience and international diversity enabling access to creative experts for any large-scale project. Original, authentic and cost-effective painting, sculpture and photography have never been so easy to source for commercial projects. And never from one source. As demand for creative guidance grows in a market thirsty for fresh thinking; we also deliver these previously hard-to-source services.

Enjoying, developing and engaging as a social art collective giant has already proven valuable to all our crowd. We are channelling their incredible skills for a business market that edges more and more creative by the paint drop. The CEO’s definition is shifting; the label innovation is being dropped for creativity. A recent IBM study found students and CEOs both believe creativity is the most important emerging competency of future leaders. That said welcome to the one stop creative powerhouse blur Group!

Crowdsourcing Art Projects and Artists: The WEB 2.0 Approach

// June 22nd, 2010 // View Comments // b-wired

Not only geeks are fascinated by web 2.0. Numerous art performances, labelled “art” or not, have found their inspiration from the social media and crowdsourcing culture. Wikiworks of crowdsourced art of a totally new kind have been created. Here’s a selection of projects that, although initiated by an individual artist, have needed participation to be completed. The organiser makes the artwork possible and coordinates the different contributions, but he or she cedes absolute control over the work itself and lets the public take it over.

MySpace Invasion
The artist Space Invader, known for his mosaics which he puts onto house walls in cities , now invades MySpace. The principle: you add the profile Myspace Invader to your friends and place it among the top 8. Then you are invaded. Nearly 8000 profiles are participating at the moment.

Bio mapping
The artist Christian Nold has developed the concept of bio mapping. The principle: While taking a walk you are wired up to a device (a kind of lie detector) which is linked to a GPS and registers your Galvanic Skin Response, an indicator of your emotional arousal in conjunction with the geographical location. Combining these two devices makes it possible to identify the places that touch us emotionally and those that do not, and thus to create an emotional chart. Here an example from Greenwich and one from San Francisco.

One Thousand Paintings
Onethousandpaintings is a series of paintings by Zürich artist Sala and they represent the numbers from 1 to 1000. Each painting is unique and its price is calculated by taking the difference between 1000 and the number it represents and adding a premium according to how many pictures have been sold already. Like most ideas, this one has already been copied: Do you have a minute? exploits the same concept but with the 1440 minutes of the day.

Wall of the world
This project, which wants to become the 8th wonder of the world, is a 26 km long wall in Latvia onto which the names of one percent of the world’s population (i.e. 65 million names) will be engraved. If you want your name to be on the list, click here .

Favcol
Favcol shows the average colour of FlickR by calculating the average colour of each photo tagged favcol. To participate just add “favcol” to the list of a photo’s tags and it will be taken into account.

Deleted Images
Deleted Images or the junkyard of art offers you to share the photos you would otherwise have deleted. A different view on photography… after all, the lomographic movement originated that way.

Google will eat itself
This project acts on the assumption that as, firstly, Google is listed on the stock market, it is technically (with lots of money) possible to become its proprietor. Secondly, on Google you can earn money via AdSense. The idea is simple: Google is to be taken over by using money earned via Google’s own sponsored links programme to at once invest into Google stocks, which would make Google eat itself. The aim is to completely own Google via the revenues created by Google itself. If this is to happen at today’s pace it will take 200 million years to do it.

Web2DNA
Web2DNA offers to display your blog’s or website’s DNA. Here the DNA of Culture-Buzz.

Museum of Modern Betas
The MoMB is a blog-museum that lists all beta version websites and shows a screenshot. The idea reminds of the club Terminus by TechCrunch which lists websites that are no longer in operation.

Bank of International Artmoney
The BIAM wants to bring some art into financial transactions. The principle: Once you have registered with BIAM you can create notes. These must be original works of art and measure 12×18 cms. Each note is worth 27 Euros with its value increasing by 5 Euros annually during the first seven years. It can be used to pay other BIAM members or anyone who accepts it (all explanations here).

Also to be named is the The Million Dollar Homepage, a performance of its own kind which owes its success to internet users’ participation. As does PostSecret which weekly publishes the secrets internet users send in by postcard.

Finally, as a last example of initiatives crossing art and web 2.0, there is the excellent blog Buzzeum which lists alternative marketing actions conducted by museums worldwide. The blog is edited by the author of the blog Du marketing plein les doigts. There is also a Google Maps mashup by Artscape of expositions in Paris, also available as widgets.

Thanks to Culture-Buzz for their great post.

Jeff Koons Video Interview

// June 18th, 2010 // View Comments // b-inspired, b-wired

Jeff Koons wowed the crowds with his artwork on a BMW destined for the Le Mans. See the interview…

Reality TV’s Crowdsourced Art Champion!

// June 17th, 2010 // View Comments // b-Crowd, b-scene, b-wired

“Work of Art: The Next Great Artist,” a new reality series on Wednesday on Bravo, features Simon de Pury, China Chow and a competition for artists. It has Sarah Jessica Parker as an executive producer and the winner receives $100,000 and a solo show at the Brooklyn Museum. As a committed supporter of artists at b-uncut we welcome a step that will take art into the homes of millions. The traditional art industry’s aristocratic bubble is diffusing to a widespread phenomenon. Online art networks and marketplaces are the foundation for this shift. Historically, Fine Art was a joy and fetish of a wealthy elite but now, web enabled, REAL & AFFORDABLE art is available to buy from AUTHENTIC, SKILLED and LOCAL artists. b-uncut is leading a crowdsourced art revolution, facilitating access to great quality, fair priced artwork from artists that receive the fairtrade they deserve.

Well as much as we can wince at fine art getting the X-FACTOR treatment, it’s kinda refreshing to see emerging art see a more commercialised environment. “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist” will conjure a wider spread discussion to what kind of art has more value. The series is a free-for-all pitting representational artists against conceptual ones and so on. Good huh? These debates and tussles were exercised readily behind a silk curtain but now released to the people to question and decide. This is cool isn’t it!? Artists…gasp the fresh air, your time has come.