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Line of Death

Sun S. Jaegal & Ryan Smith

November 29. - 1. December 2018

Vernissage:  Thursday, November 29. 2018, 19 hr

einBuch.haus / Winsstraße 42, 10405 Berlin

Line of Death surrounds the idea of authorship and glitch within a physical space. Taking on two views of the author and the  phenomenon, archived footage from YouTube tech channels, describing a peculiar phone glitch is played in the corner of the  gallery. The phenomenon is then extrapolated across the gallery into physical materiality varying in natural and man-made mediums.  

On the opposite side of the room, there’s a reference book listing  the source footage and material of the videos featured in the  exhibition. After the show ends, the work is contorted and  photographed multiple times and presented as a publication, which will be distributed at einBuch.haus in April 2019.  

“Samsung’s 2016 flagship smartphones seem to be plagued by  unnecessary problems. First, it was the Galaxy Note 7’s exploding  battery that caused the OEM grief, and now, it’s been the pink line  issue of the Galaxy S7 edge. For the unfamiliar, Galaxy S7 edge users have been reporting a defect  in the handset, which causes a strange pink line to appear on the  device’s screen. Users all over the world have encountered this bizarre  problem and took to several online forums to voice their annoyance.  Now, Samsung has come forward and acknowledged the issue per  reports. According to Tweakers, a Dutch blog, the representatives of  Samsung Benelux have accepted the presence of the “purple stripe.”

Samsung Acknowledges Galaxy S7 Edge Pink Line Issue, January 2017
(https://www.techtimes.com/articles/194479/20170126/samsung-acknowledges-galaxy-s7-edge-pink-line-issue-promises-repair.htm)

“It wouldn’t be the launch of a first-generation Apple product without  a few hiccups — who can forget Antennagate and Bendgate? — and  the iPhone X is no different. A handful of users report that a myste rious and inextinguishable green line has appeared on their device’s  display.  We can at least speculate on one part of that. iPhone Xs have a new  diamond sub-pixel pattern in their displays, and as such all green  sub-pixels appear in lines, while red and blue alternate.”

Mysterious ‘green line of death’ appears on some iPhone X displays, Techcrunch November 2017 (https://techcrunch.com/2017/11/10/mysterious-green-line-of-death-appears-on-some-iphone-x-displays/)

Sun S. Jaegal and Ryan Smith

After meeting at Royal College of Art in 2013, Ryan and Sun have  been attempting to physicalise digital ephemera. In the days  of heavy duty data, they continue breaking down small hidden  details in the everyday, often referring to experimental writing  narratives, screen behaviours and authorship of the Internet.  With the interest in the new aesthetic of the glitch and appro priation methods, they look at the relationship of author and  technology. Previous works, Times and Ritual of Mechanical  Reproduction looked at how scanners can be manipulated into a  system, creating generative visuals. Their aim of this show is to  further their studies of modern and past technology by bringing  screen phenomena to physical space.

sunjaegal.com
ry-an.co.uk

 


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