Prelude to the online performance "The Possibility of an Army".
While wandering across a quiet church square in a small Dutch village, I'm talking on the phone with a journalist from the New York Times. The conversation seems oddly misplaced in this pictorial setting where me and my girlfriend came to mourn the passing of a close family member, her mom, my friend. My girlfriend is still in the restaurant overlooking the square, drinking tea with her sister, I stepped out to talk on the phone. Nina Siegal, a freelance journalist based in Amsterdam, is interested in art on Instagram, as am I as it happens. She told me she requested my contact details through the Stedelijk Museum in the Netherlands and my gallery CarrollFletcher, in London. Most likely they thought I would be good for an interview because of an intervention I initiated on Instagram October 2014, distributing millions of bought followers to a select group of Instagram accounts within the art world.
I bought the fake followers through a contact in Lithuania, whom I approached on Ebay. Profiles made to look like actual people, made to follow any profile I wanted for $0.002 each, so $5k bought me 2.5 million followers.
Knowing that fake followers are often used to boost the image of brands, political parties, recording artists, and celebrities, I had long since developed an interest in this artificial audience. The profiles, or identities that are formed from appropriated images, and copied bios with spelling errors added. What would happen if I were to use this artificial audience as material for a gesture? A warped perspective on the “attention economy” of course, in my eyes desperately necessary in our present age of hyper-capitalism.
We spoke about the accounts I had selected and how the people behind these accounts often use follower counts to validate their cultural output. Optimizing the relevance of an artwork or artist through public relations isn't a new thing of course, but the accessibility of this type of brand management had started to influence artists.
Brad Troemel speaks about Aesthletes for example, describing artists conforming to their audience’s aesthetic demands to receive addictive notifications of the audience’s approval in the form of “likes”, in order to pursue a more socially and financially validated art practice. Another example is Petra Cortright, an LA based artist, and good friend, who priced her video works according to the view count on YouTube. While the reliability of such numbers is unclear in a time when viewcounts are purged, and Twitter admits millions of accounts do not represent actual human beings, it is an interesting concept. The bots are accepted as part of our social fabric, as long as they don’t spam us, right? But what actually happens to an art practice if you quantify the link between audience reception and market value? What is the quality of the followers, how many 'managed' or artificial identities are injected to increase market value?
Many other artistic careers are justified just through their popularity on social media in the press. Ai Weiwei is often mentioned with a Twitter or Instagram link, and the number of persons following him on these Western-based social media. The larger the audience, the more valuable the cultural contribution it seems. Who can avoid speaking about blockbuster exhibitions, queuing for hours, or an image that was “liked” 3 million times. Take Kylie Jenner, please, the current record holder for the most “liked” image on Instagram, who seems to be popular for her body, genealogy, and her popularity level itself. Hard to miss perhaps, but do we need to discuss her contribution to culture at length? The regime of audience validation within cultural critique has reached frightening levels.
The kind journalist listened to my detailed explanation of how my commission for Jeu de Paumes, a well-known photo museum in Paris, came about. I carefully explained why I decided to round out these Instagram accounts at 100k (100,000 followers). Making them equally important if one only considers the number of followers. I could hear her typing away while I said I bought over 70 thousand “likes” for Richard Prince, 50k for Klaus Biesenbach, 40k for Ai Weiwei, 96k for Stefan Simchowitz, 97k for Petra Cortright and a petty 2,700 or so for Hans Ulrich Obrist. I felt guilty bombarding her with so many numbers and the research I had done into the world of fake “likes” and followers, so I stopped and offered to send her my 'before and after' screengrabs. After a slight pause she asked: Did you ever directly sell any artworks through Instagram, and do you think this happens a lot with other artists? I said I honestly didn't know, and said I wouldn't feel good speculating about how many people went to one of my galleries because they saw my work on Instagram, let alone give numbers on other galleries and artists. Though I did point her to some dealers and collectors active in IG of course.
Later she asked again if I could prove which of my sales really happened through Instagram. So I decided to emphasize that my work was meant to comment on the value of audience quantification in the art world, in times where everything, even social relationships (now called social capital) can be defined in monetary terms. When I returned to the restaurant to join my girlfriend, she smiled and said she felt proud looking at me on the quant village square talking to the New York Times, knowing we had a whole life ahead of us.
Sadly Siegal chose not to include my references in her article in the New York Times published on August 5, 2015. She chose instead to use Instagram follower counts, such as those for Simon de Pury, Ai Weiwei and others, to validate the position of the artists mentioned in her article, even using some accounts I had informed her on that I had manipulated, like Simon de Pury’s one. It ended up being a promotional article for Instagram, validating the false attention economy it establishes, popularizing an auction house that relies on this economic system.
www.nytimes.com/2015/08/10/arts/design/instagram-takes-on-growing-role-in-the-art-market.html
This is only the most recent example of journalism trying to validate cultural output by using false audience numbers. It’s like using a museum's attendance record although you know it’s doctored. Presidential elections with sold votes. (Hi UBERMORGEN!) Earlier articles even mentioned my work while relating art practices such as Ryan Gander's or Richard Prince's to follower counts: validating art practices by citing follower counts from a commercial image sharing platform known to be false.
How do we end the unbridled use of this false validation system in journalism? How can we make clear that follower counts, “views” or “likes” are not and will never be a trustworthy measure of social commitment as long as financial incentive is in place to manipulate these counts. Even that quantified social feedback does not mean quality. How do we keep this objectivist system celebrating efficiency and a corporate, western approach to art and culture from manipulating cultural critique? Do we need to sell T-shirts and tote bags on Kickstarter before we can criticize these false validation systems? I was thinking it is time to use more dramatic terms.I shall commence to recruit a virtual, Discordianist, Hessian army.