“All in Pieces” is an installation, which can grab Tweets from Twitter in real time and project them onto a set of mirror pieces. At the same time, the computer program turns every letter of the Tweets into a sound frequency. The installation creates an immersive environment for audiences to resonate from their daily experience of information fragmentation, which is a social issue caused by the explosion of information on the Internet and the expanding of new media. As a primary information source, social media is gradually but deeply influencing people’s life by its “short”, “quick” and “inconsistent” characteristics. It is getting more and more difficult to construct or reconstruct meanings from the ocean of scattered information. “All in Pieces” reflects the issue and refines the related daily experience.
Detailed Description:
Social media is becoming a primary source of information and news, and Twitter is a significant representative of social media. As we know, “short”, “quick” and “inconsistent” are the basic characteristics of tweets. Each tweet can only contain 140 characters. According to the statistics from the Internet Live Stats website, “Every second, on average, around 6,000 tweets are tweeted on Twitter, which corresponds to over 350,000 tweets sent per minute, 500 million tweets per day and around 200 billion tweets per year”. And these are only the statistics of a single social media website.
To quickly cope with the ocean of this scattered information, our brains have to change the way we used to take in information. Before the Internet, human brains usually read in linear way, but since the development of Internet, to deal with huge amount of information, our brains are getting used to scanning, searching for key words, scrolling up and down quickly. However, consuming fast and fragmented information not only distracts people’s attention but also has negative impacts on human brains. Maryanne Wolf, a Tufts University cognitive neuroscientist, worried that people will “lose the ability to express or read convoluted prose” and “become Twitter brains”.
Meanwhile, attention is becoming a scarce resource. Advertisers, politicians and even normal people who just want to develop the sense of self-presence try different ways to compete for attentions and occupy the only leftover vacant time of others. People get more and more exhausted drowning in the ocean of fragmented information. With this kind of experience, I started to ask myself two questions – how does information fragmentation change the way we construct meaning and ultimately effect the quality of our lives? Can a multimedia art piece inspire gallery visitors to experience and simultaneously contemplate the phenomenon of information fragmentation?
To answer my own questions, I created “All in Pieces”. I have 46 most popular keywords from Google Trends of the current month, so the computer program can use them one by one to search the related tweets in real time. Each time at most 15 tweets can be grabbed and projected on a set of small mirror pieces. At the same time, every letter from those tweets can be interpreted to a sound frequency. The mirror pieces are used to reflect the light emitted from the projector. They were cut in different shapes and set with different angles, so the light hitting on them can disperse to fill the space. The reflection process can be regarded as a metaphor of the information forwarding and spreading process, in which, information nearly inevitably gets shattered and distorted. Thus, the visuals and sounds combine together to create an integrative experience of information fragmentation for the visitors.