In Conversation

Event
Category
Exhibition
Year
Institution
Fabrica, Brighton
Comment
In November 1997, on Duke Street in Brighton, passers-by encountered an animated mouth projected onto the pavement. Through loudspeakers they could also hear a voice trying to strike up a conversation (the voice was made up of text to speech conversions of messages sent by Internet users to the installation). When pedestrians in Brighton responded to the voice and/or the projection, a concealed microphone and surveillance camera witnessed and transmitted their actions via streaming media onto the Internet allowing the net participants to observe the street in real-time and send further messages - in effect to strike up a conversation. The surveillance image was simultaneously conveyed to a large screen inside the Fabrica Gallery in Brighton framing the action taking place on the street outside cinematically, as a drama unfolding in real-time. Participants engaged in diverse ways with the project, ranging from the pedestrians who simply walked past to certain individuals returning repeatedly to the street location and making dates with their new 'virtual' friends. On occasion, for instance if it was raining and there were no pedestrians, the online users would take over the piece, communicating directly to each other, turning the street into a chat channel itself. Sometimes they would encourage the people on the street to perform - sing a song or dance - on occasion using the text dialogue to create percussive, rhythmic 'music'. The street participants would only hear a single androgynous computer voice which could have been sent from many different users and identities. (source: www.ucl.ac.uk/slade/inconversation/brighton.html)
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