About the Project
PGP, the Public Genitals Project, is designed to playfully question
the boundaries between inside and outside, revealed and hidden,
representation and reality. It deals quite literally with mapping
body memories onto bodies, and with projecting body images from
layer to layer of social presentation and representation from skin
outward to clothing. It also collapses distance and time by using
realtime imaging from sites around the world mapped onto bodies
in Austin.
Each PGP unit consists of a video broadcast receiver, battery pack,
two small loudspeakers, and two laptop computers with flat screens
(backlit TFT type) worn by a person walking the streets of Austin.
The computers are modified so the motherboards may be taped to the
backs of the flat screens. In one version of the design the person
is naked except for the screens, which are attached to suspenders
and worn so they cover the genital areas front and back. In the
second version the person is fully clothed except for cutouts over
the genital areas front and back, within which the two screens are
mounted. The receiver and battery pack are attached to a belt which
is worn around the waist. Hardware and software development was
completed by teams of volunteers from the RTF Convergent Media program
working out of the ACTLab, supervised by the artist.
In operation, participants worldwide send images of their genital
areas via webcams to a server in the ACTLab. The received images
are digitally manipulated according to an algorithm driven by the
number of times the words "sex" and "violence" appear on the webpages
of CNN, MSNBC, and CBS. The digital manipulation smooths and abstracts
the images; in other words, they cease to be representations of
individuals' body parts, instead becoming more like imperfectly
remembered things -- the more the terms "sex" and "violence" appears
in the media, the more that actual body images recede toward imagined
recollections. The images are then broadcast to the belt-mounted
receiver, and thence displayed on the two flat screens. Concurrently,
the loudspeakers present ethnographically recorded narratives of
personal experiences with nudity, shyness, and desire, which are
stored as sound files on the computers. The juxtaposition of images
and physical body surface is meant to convey the illusion that the
viewer is looking through a transparent electronic window at the
surface of the wearer's body. In reality, of course, no actual flesh-and-blood
genitalia are directly visible, and no explicit representation of
individual genitalia is shown, though it is likely that this distinction
may be lost on the naive viewer -- we hope.
PGP (the Public Genitals Project) was originally inspired
by Richard MacKinnon and the ACTLab seminar in Theory
and Methods of an Unnameable Discourse during the period 1995-1999.
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