Cherry Blossoms - Baghdad in Boston


Cherry Blossoms by Alyssa Wright writes -
Cherry Blossoms is a backpack that uses a small microcontroller and a GPS unit. Recent news of bombings in Iraq are downloaded to the unit every night, and their relative location to the center of the city are superimposed on a map of Boston. If the wearer walks in a space in Boston that correlates to a site of violence in Baghdad, the backpack detonates and releases a compressed air cloud of confetti, looking for all the world like smoke and shrapnel. Each piece of confetti is inscribed with the name of a civilian who died in the war, and the circumstances of their death.Cherry Blossoms - [via] Link & more.
Posted by Phillip Torrone |
Jan 3, 2008 01:40 PM
Arts, GPS |
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Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
| Posted by: Mike on January 3, 2008 at 2:17 PM |
Are you sure Boston is the best place to be doing this in? You're bound to be arrested for having a 'hoax' device if you carry this thing and it goes off.
| Posted by: Russell Nelson on January 3, 2008 at 2:17 PM |
Is there an award for the most pointless use of technology? Why not just go to the place indicated on the map and throw up some confetti? If you want to end the war, vote for Ron Paul.
| Posted by: bladerunner on January 3, 2008 at 2:29 PM |
Russell
I agree with you totally this is one of the most pointless and also irresponsible project I have ever seen.
| Posted by: Alexis on January 3, 2008 at 2:33 PM |
Artists. Is there anything they can't make into a profound, feeling, I'm-so-superior "statement"?
These logic impaired use terrorist bombings to rail against U.S. taxpayers. What sense is in that? The U.S. isn't funding suicide bombers to kill civilians. Dumbasses.
| Posted by: Bob on January 3, 2008 at 2:48 PM |
Must be part of the vast right wing plot to marginalize art. Next thing will be presidential hopefuls appearing on comedy shows like Letterman and Leno, then some has-been politician will try to act like a musician. Before it's over some over the hill actor will even run for president.
| Posted by: samurai1200 on January 3, 2008 at 3:09 PM |
thanks Bob, for the most pompous, useless post ever.
this project is arty and cool, but the subject matter at its root is completely out-of-place and not at all applicable.
| Posted by: Lou on January 3, 2008 at 4:17 PM |
Pointless? Irresponsible? Pompous? Oh yeah, I forgot...those brown people getting blown up by U.S. bombs don't count. I agree with Sam, it's brilliant!
| Posted by: bladerunner on January 3, 2008 at 4:32 PM |
Pointless? Irresponsible? Pompous?
Yes Yes and Yes
This "artwork" will not stop the war it only makes a confetti mess.
Brilliant no!
Techo-nonsense yes!
| Posted by: David Feather on January 3, 2008 at 6:26 PM |
I believe our cities are littered enough without so-called "artists" filling the streets with more detritus. Is it possible to perhaps use the system to deliver something bio-degradable? Perhaps dispersal of native wildflower seeds in a park environment? Or maybe these "artists" like living in dirty cities?
| Posted by: Matt on January 3, 2008 at 8:35 PM |
Can we design an Arduino-based device to fire all of the daddy's money lesbian female "artists" in Boston into the sun
| Posted by: rich on January 3, 2008 at 8:37 PM |
I'm not real big on political-art - but this one kind of impresses me.
kind of surprised by the amount of negative / hostile reactions...
| Posted by: ryborg on January 4, 2008 at 1:45 AM |
This might as well be pointless -- it's a completely inane way to protest the war. I hope someone is walking behind her with a broom!
| Posted by: digger on January 4, 2008 at 2:12 AM |
Good grief.
I don't think this is the forum for gay bashing, artist-bashing, or politics.
I think it is a fun use of technology. If you folks had actually read the article, you might have realized that it is an interesting and fairly original idea for artwork.
| Posted by: Silas on January 4, 2008 at 6:27 AM |
Interesting.
Try going through an airport with this....
Heh, I had to say it.. :-P
| Posted by: C/Pm on January 4, 2008 at 6:37 AM |
Ooooh, goody!
Maybe a GPS mod can go off when one of the medical planes carrying troops wounded or killed by IED's lands in America, or it can be used to remind the U.S. of the people killed in the bombings of the USS Cole, the first World Trade Tower attack, and the second as well, the Pentagon, and the field in Pennsylvania, and march out the names of the families that were left to pick up the pieces of these attacks. This is fantastic use of technology to remind those of us that forget.
Also, what is its carbon footprint and does it contribute to global warming?
| Posted by: Zee on January 4, 2008 at 6:53 AM |
Seems to me based on the posts here it's more of a wank generating device. Performance wank art if you will.
| Posted by: Icaruswing on January 4, 2008 at 6:58 AM |
C/Pm, From what I sense of this project, that wouldn't be completely out of line, remember that the violence that this project is overlaying metaphorically on American soil - are largely being carried out against civilians by people with similar motivations as those who carried out the attacks that you mention, not by Americans. I don't see this project as being necessarily anti-American at all. The thing about all this is that America is at war, and yet, unless an individual or one of your close friends or family is there, many of us are barely aware of the fact. The media isn't bringing most of us any closer, so artists get involved to help bring some of the impact back to the pubic in creative ways. The project isn't hurting anyone, I think it is really interesting, and frankly based on the response it has proved here, it is fairly successful at geting folks to think as well.
| Posted by: Vox on January 4, 2008 at 8:21 AM |
An art idea does not have to make sense, it doesn't have to prove anything. It's not bound by the rules so many comment-makers seem to be placing upon it. It is one of many responsibilities the art world has...to get you to respond.
| Posted by: Charlie Lesoine on January 4, 2008 at 12:49 PM |
This got me thinking about art in general. Art is supposed to impact you in some way when you see it for yourself. I feel like this piece will actually be more impactful when someone is explaining the concept on a website like this. When the entire process is explained, it's a strange and wonderful idea but I doubt anyone on the street who witnesses it go off will know what the hell just happened, or care or even consider that it might be art. "did that wierdo in the backpack just throw some confetti into the air?" Also I don't think it's extreme enough to really make people on the street think. Explosions create permanent scars in the land, they don't wash or blow away like confetti. Just pour some red paint on the ground and label it Iraqi blood.
| Posted by: Volkemon on January 4, 2008 at 1:44 PM |
Is it art? Anything by an artist is.
After visiting the links and reading all the comments, I must agree with Charlie. The impact at the performance level lacks in audience enlightenment.
The littering factor, and the wisdom of a 'random and explosive' delivery (in post 9/11 USA), make this somewhat moronic, but well meaning I suppose.......
| Posted by: traindriver on January 6, 2008 at 5:34 PM |
that thing will get your ass shot by some police officer!!!
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