Out of the Ordinary
Tuesday 19th July 2005
Metro (page 21)
By Wayne Burrows
Data analysis sounds like a very contemporary, computer-age activity. Everything from CCTV footage to shopping receipts, bank balances to medical records, is examined by people looking for patterns, and their reports regularly pour from universities and think tanks. But it is only the nature of the information that has changed since humankind first tried to reach the future in the patterns of the stars, or of patterns of tea leaves in an empty cup.
For Ellie Harrison, curator of new exhibition Day-to-Day Data, the interest in information collection stems from a feeling that the decisions about what counts as important omit much that is interesting about our everyday life. “Many of the artists I’ve chosen here are fascinated by data nobody would usually bother with”, she explains, “so in one sense the exhibition is asking what scientists and statisticians are really doing”.
Now, the gathering of information has become a big political issue, and the work of some of the artists takes on additional layers. Sam Curtis’s absurd decision to simply count everyone in the UK is inevitably loaded in a context where ID cards look increasingly likely to be introduced. Adele Prince’s web-based piece involves tracking down ‘abducted’ shopping trolleys on behalf of supermarkets, while Hannah Brown’s work takes a hard look at her personal efficiency, matching daily achievements to a ludicrously detailed checklist of objectives.
Works such as these satirise employers’ increasingly detailed supervision of employees, and marketers’ insatiable interest in our movements and purchases. Other works take a more playful or poetic approach to the theme. “Helen Frosi’s work goes into vast detail about the markings on banana and apple skins, and the patterns of coffee dregs”, says Harrison. “She then invents procedures that might find winning lottery numbers in the data - scientific methods applied to unusual data”. Harrison continues to collect information about herself, something she’s done since her student days at Goldsmith’s College in London. A Daily Data Display Wall will use lights and monitors to display everything from the artist’s food intake, sleep patterns and walking quotas to notes on the atmospheric pressure outside the gallery.
Like blogging and reality TV, this obsessive interest in the minutiae of daily life, and the urge to make it public, seems like a new form of autobiography. For Harrison, the difference lies in the playful manipulation of the material.
“One artist, Therese Stowell, charted her experience of 45 emotions over a 24 hour period”, she says. “The result reveals a lot about her emotions, in a very unemotional way”. “Tony Kemplen’s piece involves watching the news on TV while eating a pizza”, Harrison adds. “Each time he took a bite, he made a screen grab and photographed the pizza. The finished work is a flick-book showing random news moments and a vanishing pizza. It echoes the way we consume current affairs”. As Harrison points out: “It’s about recording things that you might not otherwise notice or be interested in”.
Further Reference
- Day-to-Day Data website
- Angel Row Gallery website
- Daily Data Display Wall
- Sam Curtis website
- Adele Prince website
- Therese Stowell website
- Tony Kemplen website
Other Press
- After the Data Confessional: Interview with Ellie Harrison
- Night at the Museum
- Interview: Ellie Harrison
- A Most Unusual Referendum Results Party
- Art Review: Counterpoint
- Getting Straight to the Point
- Confetti Cannon Primed to Explode, or Maybe Not
- Indyref Confetti Cannon to go on Display at Edinburgh Art Festival
- Counterpoint at Edinburgh Art Festival 2014
- Eat 22 (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Power For The People! (by Ellie Harrison)
- Counter-Hegemonic Propaganda Machine (by Ellie Harrison)
- The Hunger Artists
- The Artists’ Bond
- Notes Towards Becoming a Good Citizen (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- She Shelves Sanctuary
- National Museum of Roller Derby (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Early Warning Signs
- Artist Fund Thyself
- Ellie & Oliver Show
- Art for the Age of Information
- Workers Are Not Alone
- Market Forces
- DIY Lottery Art Funding
- Converse Emerging Artists Award: Ellie Harrison
- Fair Exchange
- Vault Art Glasgow
- A Good Climate for Business (by Ellie Harrison)
- Interview with Ellie Harrison
- A Brief History of Privatisation
- Art Monthly Profile
- Work-a-thon for the Self-Employed
- Trajectories (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Furtherfield Radio
- Funding: One Alternative
- New Forms of Collectivity (by Ellie Harrison)
- The Finished Article
- Art Erupts Out of a Fine Mess
- Artists in a Bid for Success with Different Type of Draw
- Party Politics: Election Art
- Young Scottish Artists
- Budget Buzzwords Prompted Machine to Deliver Crisps
- Lady Dada
- Summer Reading
- Altermodernism: The Age of Stupid (by Ellie Harrison)
- Ellie Harrison Loves Tea
- Confessions of a Recovering Data Collector
- Five Pointers to Becoming the ‘Perfect Artist’
- How Can We Continue Making Art? (by Ellie Harrison)
- This is Not a Circular
- Ones to Watch
- Braziers International
- Two Years of Tea Blog
- Angel Row Closing Party
- The Obsessives
- New Stars on Broadway
- This is Ellie Harrison
- Prime
- Insignificance
- Day-to-Day Data Review
- Sports Day
- Many Conceptual Artists Have an Unholy Delight in Statistics
- Day-to-Day Data Review
- Under the Data, the Stars
- Day-to-Day Data Exhibitions Preview
- Out of the Ordinary
- Just the Facts...
- Day-to-Day Data Event Preview
- Underground Movement
- Postcard Artist Set to Go Underground
- Gold Adventure
- Not to Be Sneezed at...
- The Big Sneeze
- Artist’s Profile
- LabCulture Feature
- Treat Yourself Review
- A Day in the Life
- Eat Me!
- Eat 22 Events Preview
- Graduate’s Snappy Diet
- Diet Hard
- Little Gems