Examples To Consider
September 5, 2006
http://www.a-nunedited.co.uk/reviews/
a-n’s open submission review site.
A database of artists, work, galleries and shows with biographical, financial and associative data as well as images and links.
http://thinkingaboutart.blogs.com/art/2005/04/a_new_project_a.html
Artists Interview Artists. Artists submit five questions and are assigned five to answer themselves from another artist chosen at random.
http://www.artornot.org/index0.htm
Like “Hot or not” for art. Collaborative ranking of images.
http://www.artrumours.com/
Sadly defunct gossip site for art.
Self-submitted details of contemporary UK artists. Biographies, shows, images, interviews.
An online version of one of Art & Language’s 1970s “indexing” projects. “Index 001″ is a good model of collaborative art/critical practice.
Tagging of colours in palettes created from found images.
http://www.tate.org.uk/britain/yourcollection/createyourcollection.do
Create your own (online) show from the Tate’s collection.
http://del.icio.us/
“Folksonomy” site that harnesses the wisdom of crowds for tagging URLs.
An illustration community site with exhibition spaces and discussions.
Links ranked by users to produce a list of the most popular articles.
Links, images and writing about the best new illustration and animation.
http://johnleach.co.uk/wiki/EverybodyLovesEricRaymond
Copyleft comic strip with scripts developed collaboratively on a wiki.
http://www.fineartadoption.net/
A gift economy site for the adoption of physical artworks.
News site and email newsletter for arts events.
Tagging of images and parts of images, commentaries and discussions on images, image sets and groups building on tags, geotagging.
http://www.freemanifesta.org/
http://www.freewords.org/biennial/fbdir.html
Open shows that anybody could submit work for, the first as in a slot at manifesta, the second globally.
American student organisation for free culture. Includes art competitions and art shows.
http://www.tate.org.uk/collections/glossary/
http://www.tate.org.uk/collections/glossary/newglossaryterms.htm
The glossary the Tate use in descriptions of works online, and the opportunity to help update it. (Why doesn’t the Tate allow tagging?)
Peer analysis of a complex lawsuit and the legal and technological concepts around it.
http://happyfamousartists.blogspot.com/
Blog of images and links to hot new art.
http://www.illustrationfriday.com/
A community providing weekly challenge for illustrators around a set theme.
http://images.google.com/imagelabeler/
A game in which two people tag images, building a folksonomy through compettion.
http://kollabor8.toegristle.com/
Collaborative multi-generation image creation.
News site and email newsletter for arts events.
A theory of consumption that may fit contemporary art and explain the value in gathering as much information/criticism around it as possible.
Social networking for brands.
Social networking site with music for download and soon sale.
A high quality and high volume mix of New York artworld news and Free Speech news.
A season of networked arts events in London organised collaboratively and with an emphasis in part on free culture. The “node.l reader” publication is good as well.
http://opencongress.omweb.org/modules/wakka/HomePage
An academic event around free culture with even the finances organised openly on a wiki.
Clip-art illustrations created and dedicated to the public domain. The only large-scale project to create images explicitly for re-use.
http://twenteenthcentury.com/saul/os.htm
“Open Source And Collective Art Practice” by Saul Albert.
http://cvsbook.ucsd.edu/cvsbook/src/openSourceArt/
“Open Source Art” by Jon Phillips.
Collaborative gathering of geographic data using inexpensive GPS devices and creation of copylefted high-quality maps using that data.
http://www.pandora.com/mgp.shtml
Semantic music reccomendation service and its “Music genome Project”.
The Public Library Of Science. “Open access” scientific journals and papers.
Local free culture group with hosted media as well as shows and competitions.
http://rhizome.org/artbase/
http://rhizome.org/text/
Archive and taxonomy of net.art with online “shows” and organised by site users, and a large archive of essays and discussions around similar subjects.
http://www.aswarmofangels.com/
Peer-funded and peer-planned copyleft film project.
Folksonomy tagging of mudeum collections.
The Tate’s hierarchical taxonomy of subjects within a work (here Warhol’s double Elvis).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Visual_arts
Wikipedia’s peer-produced, copyleft articles on art.
http://www.woostercollective.com/
Site devoted to finding and promoting street art/graffitti from around the world.
http://www.tate.org.uk/britain/writeyourown/
Write your own label for Tate musuem displays.