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11-16-2010, 09:17 AM
|  | Superfast 2.0 | | Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: San Antonio, TX | | | NYU Professor to Implant Camera in the Back of his Head
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Uh..... huh. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000....html?mod=e2tw Quote:
Students long have complained about teachers with eyes on the backs of their heads.
A New York University photography professor is going one further by implanting a camera in the back of his head.
The project is being commissioned by a new museum in Qatar. But the work, which would broadcast a live stream of images from the camera to museum visitors, is sparking a debate on campus over the competing values of creative expression and student privacy.
Wafaa Bilal, an Iraqi assistant professor in the photography and imaging department of NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, intends to undergo surgery in coming weeks to install the camera, according to several people familiar with the project.
For one year, Mr. Bilal's camera will take still pictures at one-minute intervals, then feed the photos to monitors at the museum. The thumbnail-sized camera will be affixed to his head through a piercing-like attachment, his NYU colleagues say. Mr. Bilal declined to comment for this story.
The artwork, titled "The 3rd I," is intended as "a comment on the inaccessibility of time, and the inability to capture memory and experience," according to press materials from the museum, known as Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art. Mr. Bilal's work would be among the inaugural exhibits of Mathaf, scheduled to open next month.
Because Mr. Bilal is an active professor, teaching three courses this semester and scheduled to teach this spring, his special camera could capture not just his personal activity, but also his interactions with students.
That possibility, of exposing private encounters without participants' consent, has raised concerns among NYU administrators and faculty.
"Obviously you don't want students to be under the burden of constant surveillance; it's not a good teaching environment," said Fred Ritchin, associate chairman of the department.
After Mr. Bilal received the commission, he informed the department chairwoman, Deborah Willis, of his project in January. "I said, what if students are upset?" Ms. Willis recalled. "What if you're documenting what they don't want you to see?"
Ms. Willis and Mr. Bilal brought the issue to the attention of the deans, Ms. Willis said, and Mr. Bilal presented the concept for his project at a faculty meeting several months ago, according to a university spokesman, John Beckman.
"It's fair to say that a good deal of discussion ensued," Mr. Beckman said. The school is still determining what rules it will set for Mr. Bilal and his camera on campus.
During the course of the discussions, Mr. Bilal has informed all of his students of his plans and has agreed to cover the camera with a black lens cap while on university property, according to Mr. Ritchin. Another proposal would require him to turn off the camera while in NYU buildings, Mr. Beckman said.
Mr. Bilal's personal activity is a separate matter, of course. "I guess anybody accepting a dinner invitation will have to realize that certain things will be going on," Mr. Ritchin said.
While Mr. Bilal's project represents a novel challenge for NYU, it is hardly the first time his work has caused a stir.
For a 2008 project, "Virtual Jihadi," Mr. Bilal hacked a video game to insert an avatar of himself as a suicide-bomber hunting President George W. Bush. The work incited a wave of protests, both for and against it, and eventually the New York Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit in Mr. Bilal's defense after the exhibition was shut down.
In his 2007 work, "Domestic Tension," Mr. Bilal confined himself to a gallery in Chicago for a month, inviting the public to visit a website where they could "shoot" the artist by remotely firing a paintball gun at him.
And in June, Mr. Bilal tattooed on to his back a map of Iraqi cities for a work called "...and Counting." The names of the cities were spelled out in Arabic script, with dots added to mark the location of American and Iraqi casualties.
The new museum where Mr. Bilal's camera-based work is to be shown is overseen by the Qatar Musuems Authority, whose other projects include the National Museum of Qatar and the Museum of Islamic Art, which opened in 2008.
A curator of the exhibition that includes Mr. Bilal's work says the artist defies categorization. "He's not really a photographer, he's not really a video artist, he's not really a performance artist," curator Till Fellrath said.
"Whatever artwork he creates, he doesn't want people to just look at it, he wants them to participate in it."
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11-17-2010, 08:29 AM
|  | Superfast 2.0 | | Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: San Antonio, TX | | | Seriously? Nobody thought this was interesting? | 
11-17-2010, 08:31 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2009 Location: Tennessee | | | I do now. I didn't see it.
I find it discomforting actually. Brings a whole new meaning to "eyes in the back of his head?"
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Let's Go Pred-a-tors!
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11-17-2010, 08:38 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Edinburgh & Dundee, Scotland | | | Sounds like a challenge to get the best photobombs possible, especially if he won't be seeing them straight away :P
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EB Musicman/Ibanez/Ampeg/Peavey/Marshall/Tech 21
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11-17-2010, 08:54 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Long Island, NY | | | he seems like a ridiculous human being. i applaud that. | 
11-17-2010, 10:45 AM
| | | | What the what?
__________________ Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray Salamon I think what is being said is that he can't find porn on the internet. Massive fail. That's like, Mark Wilson sized failing. | | 
11-17-2010, 11:22 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Metro Detroit, Michigan | | | I wish he'd do something useful. Oh wait, he's a photography professor. | 
11-17-2010, 11:47 AM
|  | The Lowdown Diggler | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Huntington Beach, CA | | | He should put one in his forehead. Still, if I was going to undergo this operation I would wait until the camera could be operated through mind control. Then I would make a better version of the first-person perspective porno for my own personal consumption. Which I might also film. Which I might also consume. Anyone else seeing an image of a snake eating its own tail. Snap. Great now I just snapped a pic of my fat butt as I was looking for a tail. How do I turn this thing off? Hey look a sexy asian chick. A hamburger. Mmmm burger. I gotta hit the can. I can occupy my time by watching the playback on my camera. For my own personal consumption. Damn it! I'm a monkey. | 
11-17-2010, 11:57 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Houston | | Quote: |
The thumbnail-sized camera will be affixed to his head through a piercing-like attachment
| So yeah, other than it not being a real implant and a totally unnecessary one at that, why risk infections and surgery complications when you could just wear a headband or collar? Oh yeah, it's just a publicity stunt and nothing of any use will actually come from it. | 
11-17-2010, 02:14 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Tampa | | | Your tuition dollars at work. What a maroon. | 
11-18-2010, 08:10 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Istanbul | | | Artists used to be cool with their art,not their stunts,clothing,ridiculous hair,absurf attitude etc.
No matter what you do,you won't be near as cool as Da Vinci Mr. Ihaveacameraonthebackofmyhead...
__________________ Quote:
Originally Posted by Relic Yes, you look like the pizza, dammit. Now get back to work!:D | Quote:
Originally Posted by macaroni tony You're a very handsome man :D | | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | |
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