Ellsworth Kelly Hacked My Twitter

From Rhizome Artbase
Brian Piana
2009
Description

"Ellsworth Kelly Hacked My Twitter" is a real-time chart of postings from people I follow on Twitter. I have manually reduced the individual avatars of those I follow to a single, representative color, and each block shown represents an individual tweet that has come through my Twitter feed. The resulting grid is being generated in real-time, with the top-left square representing the most recent post. The remaining squares are presented left-to-right, top-down in reverse chronological order. A viewer can actively change the composition of the grid by simply changing the size of the browser window. Rows and columns can be added or removed, causing the individual squares to shift and/or wrap, thus creating a new composition. While the actual content of the tweet is not shown, the author, time, and date of the post can be viewed by placing your cursor over any given square.
This piece was always conceptualized to be a color grid, but it wasn’t until I started Photoshopping mockups that I thought of Ellsworth Kelly and, specifically, his grid pieces (such as "Colors for a Large Wall"). The visual aesthetic is certainly similar, but the nature of how the two grids are arranged couldn’t be more different. Kelly’s color square pieces are arranged in an arbitrary sequence, whereas this piece is a direct chronological representation of my Twitter feed. While unpredictable, it is certainly not arbitrary. So, as a title, "Ellsworth Kelly Hacked My Twitter" only holds up on a visual level and not a conceptual one.
Thanks to Donovan Buck for the provided scripting. Created as part of a virtual residency with Glasstire.com.

Brian Piana
12 August 2009
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2009
Brian Piana