Images and GIF courtesy of the artist
Amid a grid of interrelated aerial screenshots, Florian Freier “virtually visits” Germany's Signals-Intelligence (SIGINT) locales through his cached Google Maps browser history. The artist launched this experimental photographic collection, Cached Landscapes, in response to Citizenfour cinematographer Trevor Paglen’s Eagle Eye Photo Contest: Landscapes of Surveillance—a call for artists, journalists, and researchers to find and unveil “the landscapes of surveillance in contemporary Germany.” By algorithmically cropping, sorting, and contextualizing Maps screenshots of areas of surveillance identified by Paglen, Freier forms an abstract portrait of Germany's monitored hotspots.The series offers a meta-commentary on the automated tracking of individuals’ download histories and browser caches, revealing the online implications of Paglen’s appeal for surveillance transparency. As Freier explains to The Creators Project, “Cached Landscapes can be translated both, as ‘hidden’ landscapes showing Paglen's places of surveillance, and as invisibly tracked and ‘stored’ data, that is accumulated on surveillance servers and our personal computers.” If selected, Freier’s work will be published in the Journal Frankfurt and featured at Frankfurter Kunstverein for Paglen’s upcoming exhibition, The Octopus, running from June 20 to August 30.Below, see the algorithmic, aerial appeal of Germany's SIGINT spots in Freier's Cached Landscapes.Find more of Florian Freier's work on his website.Related:5 Oscar-Winning Documentary Tips from the 'Citizenfour' TeamArt Hackers Are Printing Leaked NSA Documents on T-Shirts and Doggie VestsHere's the Google Street View of the Sea
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