Art for Spooks is an augmented book that takes a poetic angle to electronic surveillance. It combines texts and images from “leaked” NSA documents that evidence mundane concerns of NSA employees with grooming etiquette, gossip and surveillance at the work place; the development of encryption and psychological profiling tools modeled on alleged historical links between magicians and the military; and a delirious imaginary steeped in the world of modern folklore, populated as is with UFOs, popular media archetypes of evil and good, as well as (apparently) a taste for buffalo meat, high art, and orientalist and gendered themes. These materials are juxtaposed with graphics read through a tablet interface. The act of reading generates randomized data in the forms of new images and texts which are concurrently uploaded to various social media platforms. The traces of this data are refracted through algorithmic manipulation. Art for Spooks suggests that the intense categorization and cataloguing of facts, phenonema, and life under current modes of surveillance, demands the invention of new ones that resist the stultifying effects of this kind of instrumentalization. With this in mind, the project concerns the creation of feedback meant to augment the paranoic impulses of the spy (unburdened by such trivialities as plausibility or verification) through the fabrication of evidence for unprovable verification and the grafting of this evidence on the world.
More information can be found at http://art-for-spooks.org.
- "New View: 2014 Faculty Show" at the Davis Museum, Wellesley College, September 17 to December 21, 2014
Art for Spooks uses FlickrKit developed by devedup. We have additionally incorporated the modifications introduced in the fork by sparklerapps to enable uploading from the assets library, and thus preservation of EXIF data. Our fork combines the sparklerapps fork with FlickrKit master to enable working with the latest SSL API, as well as moving some things around in header files to enable compilation with Objective-C++. Those libraries are licensed under their original licenses.
Art for Spooks uses the Vuforia augmented reality library by Qualcomm. Code is used with permission per the development agreement.
The rest of the project is available under an MIT license.