Writing by Jessica on Thursday, 15 of January , 2009 at 8:38 pm
Please join us in the techlab for one last hurrah!!
Launch event and reception for the artists is from 2pm to 4pm,
Saturday, 24th January 2009 at Surrey Art Gallery, 13750 88th ave. Surrey.

The digital revolution has included the global proliferation of millions of image-taking devices (such as digital cameras, video recorders, cell phones, and PDAs) and the sharing of billions of images through online networking and archival sites (such as Flickr). As this democratization of digital technologies makes the ability to make photographic images so ubiquitous, Glocal is interested in looking at the implications of the changing roles and relations of images within the field of visuality. Glocal is particularly interested in exploring the construction and relevance of the “unique” or “originary” image in relation to the multiple or “multitude”. How can an image retain its ‘unique’ nature as resistance against being subsumed into the multitude? How can we understand the nature of “uniqueness”? Does it remain a relevant concept for digital image making? Through an interactive installations as well as a series of on-line platforms, Glocal examines the new digital lives of images.
Glocal has been in development for the past year, incubating in the Surrey Art Gallery’s TechLab as an artist in residence project. Starting from scratch, the team has developed software tools, and hardware gadgets, and experimented with various prototypes of presentation formats and interactivity models. At the same time, the team has led various community engagement projects, built curriculum for numerous high school and university workshops, and assembled a large networks of volunteers, educators and supporters. For this event, the Glocal artists will be presenting the culmination of their research/creation. Viewers will be able to interact with the touch- table prototype that explores the aggregation within their 20,0000+
image archive, and view a series of large software-generated photographic ’similarity structures’. These ’similarity structures’ imagine how an anthropologist might attempt to build relationships between images within the archive. Using an algorithm which calculates compositional similarity between images, elaborate maps and phylogenetic trees are generated, modeling possible links between images. These temporally unique visual structures attempt to examine the complex relational environments that surround images in an online space.
The Surrey Art Gallery is located at 13750 88 Avenue (at the corner of King George Highway) in Surrey. Just 10 minutes from Surrey Central Skytrain Station by bus. Link to google map : http://is.gd/g3ls
For more information please email info@glocal.ca .
Category: Exhibition
Writing by Jessica on Thursday, 4 of December , 2008 at 7:49 pm
Photochallenge #8: Found Text and the Urban Life
Ends: Friday, December 12, 2008
Brief: Find words or text that appeal to you anywhere in your environment. Wait for “something interesting” to happen, with pedestrians, with light, with framing, with angles! Anything creative that strikes you.
Instructions: Tag your photo with “glocalproject” and “photochallenge8″ and add it to our flickr pool. Need help?
Email us .
In photo challenge #7, we asked you to find things that were “not quite right”. We were amazed by the various submissions that we received and began to think of how our project offers this amazing opportunity for street-level exposure to so many urban centres around the world. Photo challenge #8 has further exploration of this topic at it’s objective.
Street photography became possible in the early 20th century when advancements in technology made it possible to carry a hand-held camera on one’s body. There was much excitement in the ability to capture “everyday life” as the common man experienced it. Street photography allows us to consider how what we see everyday impacts what we know about the world. Considering text as a common thread in urban life adds a common thread from which to view many street photographers’ works.
In the photography of Walker Evans, the visuality of urban life reveals important cultural information about his early 20th century work. At the time of his black and white street photography, capitalism was very much changing the appearance of city streets as the ability to mass produce goods brought about consumerist culture. As we readily recognize, urban street signage dots the landscape:

New Orleans Street Corner, 1935
What does this photo tell us about the urban setting in which it was taken? We can extract a lot just through a quick glance: what language is spoken there, what kinds of products are consumed there, what kind of cars are driven there etc. etc.. Objectively, it’s also relevant to look at the scene as a whole and consider how drastic the advertising really is in relation to the entire scene. Only the fruits and vegetables in the shop window remind us of the natural world and the resources that many of our products are created from.
Later, Fred Herzog mostly documented the changing streets of Vancouver, a city on the west coast of Canada, revealing again, the almost-overwhelming presence of street signs and advertisements, as the city moved from “backwater town” to a world-class city with many desirable goods and services for its inhabitants.

The above photo, taken in Vancouver in 1968, brings colour into the visual spectrum of street photography. The viewer is bombarded by brightly coloured neon and back-lit signage, “games, guns, movies,” “western gym,” “washington.”
Most street photographers at this time were still using black and white, while Herzog preferred to work in Kodachrome, and shot on slide film. Although unnoticed for years, his work is now recognized as an important body of historical photographs. Today, the colours, font and designs of those streets signs are associated with forgotten signage in dilapidated and run-down neighbourhoods. The fact that his slide films were just recently developed into prints for exhibitions provides an extraordinary opportunity to look at “new” prints that contain outdated cultural information, including fonts and colours that we no longer associate with contemporary city scenes.
Arcade, 1968
Herzog also created some interesting use of text in his street photography. One word in the photo below hangs in the frame of a very theatrical San-Francisco moment. What is it about the word “only” that continually piques our curiosity each time we look at it? Here, Herzog has selected a moment in time, well aware of the text that lingers in the top of the frame, something we’re hoping our photo challenge participants will consider as they go out looking for inspiration.

Finally, urban text takes on a slightly different meaning in the work of
Aaron Siskund. In the photo below, the text is abstracted, thereby removing all of the normal information that we would use to analyze an urban scene. We don’t know which language this is taken from (except that it uses the
roman alphabet) or what the text originally said. We also don’t know what the text told its readers, so we don’t know what goods or services it attempted to make known. The dirtiness and chipping of the surface suggest to us that the text is old, but it could be from almost any urban setting in the world. Here, the image is more about
texture,
framing,
form and
composition – which totally abstracts the urban experience.
Lastly, the photo below emphasizes the influence that abstract expressionism had on Siskund. Again, we are unable to draw factual information about the time and place of this image. However, this is a rather familiar scene – street lamps and telephone poles, plastered with posters and ads that are peeling and weathered in our cities. Here, Siskund introduces the idea of decollage, an artwork produced by removing or tearing away from an original image. This urban photo shows text that is in decay and unreadable, however the image holds our attention.

Abstract
Hopefully this provides you with enough examples to get you thinking creatively about the text in your environment. This photochallenges reminds us that what we see everyday impacts what we know and think about the world. Our own creativity is how we make sense of time and place.
Looking forward to your submissions! We’ve provided lots of hyper-links here too so there’s lots to read about along the way. Best of luck!
Category: Local, Photo Challenge, techlab
Writing by Jessica on Tuesday, 14 of October , 2008 at 10:46 pm
Dear Glocal Participants (well, those of you nearby),
This October 18th is your chance to finally see the fruits of your labour! The Surrey Art Gallery Techlab is hosting an afternoon open-house from 1-5pm to show you some of the achievements of the Glocal Project!!
As you know, the Glocal artist team has been busy in the TechLab hacking, coding and building systems to manipulate how we make, view, and think about digital photography. Now, their interactive exhibit invites visitors to experience thousands of photographs made locally, and globally, on a giant touchable screen! The interactive prototype uses a specially-designed camera vision to sense the movement of your hands across the table, revealing photographs connected by human and machine perspectives.
This afternoon event will also invite you into the TechLab to experiment with custom built digital cameras – like a remote controlled toy car that takes photos!
We welcome you to come and see first-hand all the hard work we’ve been doing.
See you there!
The Glocal Team
Category: Exhibition, techlab
Writing by Jessica on Monday, 8 of September , 2008 at 5:11 pm
Photo Challenge #5: Photo within a Photo
Ends: Monday, September 15th, 2008
Brief: Pick a photo in the Glocal flickr pool, print it out and create a new image by superimposing your chosen image on top of a backdrop that you have created. You can decide how to manipulate or interpret that backdrop, but please provide a link to the original image in your images’ description.
Instructions: Tag your photo with “glocalproject” and “photochallenge5″ and add it to our flickr pool. Need help? Email us.
Our photo challenge topic this week was borne out of comparing historical references from the modernist photo movement with cool web art references. We’ve been inspired by the work of Kenneth Josephson and the always entertaining web art of sleeveface.com. The contrast between the historical art reference and the web art reference seems to be a relevant challenge for Glocal, given that the project examines the history of photography while experimenting with the potential for mass collaboration on the web. We also like the concept of superimposition as a means to think critically about the uses to which photography is applied, both artistically and in popular culture.
Kenneth Josephson’s photos-within-photos create visual statements that prompt the viewer to think critically of photography, both as an art form and as a representation of reality.

This simple photo of a boat, held against the backdrop of the ocean, reminds us that an image is little more than a representation of reality and never reality itself.
On sleeveface.com, the concept is similar and repeatable. Contributing photographers select an album sleeve of their choice and re-create the scene outside of the borders of the album sleeve:

This beautifully positioned album sleeve lines up nicely with the newly created backdrop. It creates a new image that alters the original context of the album art. Like the Josephson image, the arm holding up the album both adds humour, and suggests that we are supposed to be aware of the layers between the images.
Unlike photographic re-creation (Photo challenge # 3 (re) Create), where the new image is a single layer and a re-interpretation of an earlier image, superimposing an image creates a new narrative that reminds us of the distance from reality that we experience as viewers.
Have fun!
Category: Photo Challenge
Writing by Jeremy on Tuesday, 29 of July , 2008 at 3:57 pm

The above image is an example of a participants’ response to exploring colour and motion using the Motion Sequence Application (MSA).
Hello Glocal Blog Readers!
Glocal just held a week-long intensive Digital Summer Camp that was hosted by both Simon Fraser University’s School of Interactive Arts and Technology and the Surrey Art Gallery.
22 Youth from Surrey were selected to take part in this free digital summer camp from July 14-18, 2008. (Read more…)
Category: Summer Camp
Writing by Jeremy on Wednesday, 16 of July , 2008 at 2:29 pm

Hello there GLOCAL blog readers!
Our info-booth presentation at Ottawa’s Canada Day celebration was a success!
The entire GLOCAL collective was chosen as an “artist” alongside the ceramicist Murray Sanders and the painter Deborah Putman to represent Surrey as the ambassadors on behalf of Surrey’s designation as a Cultural Capital of Canada for 2008.
We were all very grateful that the weather held up for this event as the evening before was pouring with rain and this horrendous weather reduced the grassy lawn of Major’s Hill Park to vast puddles of mud.
There was also some initial panic over the installation of GLOCAL’s main presentation monitor but this issue was also quickly resolved when the day arrived (scroll down for the juicy details).
(Read more…)
Category: Exhibition, Toolkits, Uncategorized