Auction Ends: Feb 20, 2016 10:30 PM CST
Art
Art work by Local Artist David A. Brown
- Item Number
- 215
- Estimated Value
- 500 USD
- Sold
- 205 USD to pk1b6ef6a
- Number of Bids
- 5 - Bid History
Item Description
11"x17" image from the Crashed Series. By photographer, David A. Brown.
Remarks from the Artist:
Have you ever had one of those days? Where there was just too much information coming at you and just like that...the system crashed. For me these images speak to having all the information, but not the right codec to decipher it, leaving one with never being able to understand the full meaning of it all.
This image is from the CRASHED portfolio. It came about in the most painful of ways when a hard drive full of digital photographs crashed. The crash was literally the click of death: click, click, click, click …. click again. Full of hope, I sent the hard drive to a data recovery agency. When they told me they could not reclaim a single piece of data and were going to throw the drive away, I protested and implored them to send the drive back to me anyway. Figuring I had nothing to lose, I went out and bought some data recovery software, managing to recapture around 200 gigabytes. Only a fraction of the images were fully recovered, leaving the rest unreadable. There was simply no way the computer could read these incomplete, truncated files. Unable to give up, I wrote a script to copy the images to a new drive, thereby re-writing the image code. That worked to correct a small batch of these images, the ones with tight horizontal lines at the bottom, giving everything a very
#glitch art feel, yet not. So I tried yet another script to combine l similar into a single, compressed image. For those images simply refusing to not be truncated, yet a third script was used to assign a complimentary color to the broken parts. Yet no matter what was tried, some color blocks were only visible in the preview section and would then disappear as soon as I opened the files. In order to reserve those unique color blocks, I went for a final fourth script to copy over the rescued files and save them as tiff files...and in doing so those became the images you are now viewing today.
Time is both compressed and abstracted within each image.
Each image has been reclaimed from the digital abyss and, in doing so...a new work was created.
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