Street installation

Street installations are a form of street art and installation art. While conventional street art is done on walls and surfaces street installations use three-dimensional objects set in an urban environment. Like graffiti, it is generally non-permission based and the installation is effectively abandoned by the artist upon completion. Street Installations sometimes have an interactive component.[1]

Pirate Installation by BIBI - Paris on May 1st, 2002. The pirate installation evolved from 2001 to 2004. Creation and photo BIBI

Artists

Notable artist in the field include:

gollark: Yep!
gollark: No, the ads could just say "allow access from any domain".
gollark: LocalStorage and IndexedDB would be replaced with WebSQL or something, which is just an interface to SQLite.
gollark: It'll send your cookies with it and stuff, so if you could see the response it would be a horrible security problem.
gollark: Yes. The situation now is that browsers will happily send requests from one origin to another, but only if it's a GET or POST request, not allow custom headers with it, and, critically, do bizarre insane stuff to avoid letting code see the *response*.

See also

References

  • Wooster Collective's sub-category for street installations
  • New York Times article about the 2006 street art show at 11 Spring in New York's SoHo, which includes references to various installation artists
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.