In my work I deconstruct
websites and the user’s overall online experience. Frequently
my digital compositions have been realized as inkjet prints
or larger paintings on wood panel, but this exhibition
has given me the opportunity to produce a site-specific
work on a grand scale.
Lawndale Art Center has used the social networking website
MySpace to promote itself and its exhibitions since early
2006, and its collection of friends (other MySpace users)
has grown rapidly. I decided to emphasize the connectivity
of this relationship by creating Lawndale
Has Many Friends,
an abstraction of the Friends section of Lawndale’s own
MySpace site. At the time of my proposal for this exhibition
(early March 2007), Lawndale had 509 friends indexed over
thirteen Friends pages. By the time I started production
of the piece on May 5, the number of friends had jumped
to 571. Five months later the list had swelled to 756,
and there are surely more today.
The iconic blue, white, and gray template of the MySpace
Friends page has been painted fourteen times directly on
the gallery walls. The connecting lines are there both
to help simulate an online user’s clickable pathway through
these pages, and to bridge the individual panels together.
Instead of painting the 560 friend icons on the wall, I
have chosen the more flexible system of hanging physical
models of them on rods. This allows my installation to
perform in much the same manner as the MySpace website.
When new friends are added to a user’s profile on MySpace,
the user’s updated Friends list is subject to re-ordering.
Similarly, this installation will change during the course
of the exhibition; new friend icons will be added to the
gallery periodically, and the order of the hangings, as
well as the random banner ads at the top of each template,
will be rearranged. Like the actual MySpace website, where
there is no stasis, this installation will be modified
in subtle ways over time, thus uncovering a maze of networking
activity while simultaneously reconfiguring itself as a
work of art in flux.
Lawndale Has Many Friends is an abstraction of Lawndale’s
Friends listing as it existed on May 5th, 2007. As of the
exhibition’s opening, only the first 560 friends (of the
571 in the list at that time) are being presented.
The development and production of this installation has
been documented on its own MySpace page, which may be viewed
at www.myspace.com/bplawndale.

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