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Entropy8Zuper!
1999
Before meeting, both Harvey and Samyn were aware of each others’ online work, and both figure into Chapter 1 of Net Art Anthology. Working under the name Entropy8, Harvey’s art and design projects had included a collaboration with Shu Lea Cheang and Beth Stryker on the Panopticon interface for the epic narrative Brandon. Samyn, who worked online as Zuper!, was previously featured for his 1997 work LOVE, which he attributes to the fictional collective Group Z.
Panopticon interface from Shu Lea Cheang, Brandon (1998-1999). Art, design, and coding by Auriea Harvey.
In 1999, Harvey and Samyn met on hell.com, a members-only website founded by Kenneth Aronson and frequented by a number of net artists.
Auriea Harvey during the chat where she and Michaël first met.
The next day, Michaël sent her an HTML page, breath.html, featuring a simple graphic of a human chest soundtracked by his heavy breathing. A mouse pointer mirrors the user’s movements across the page, as if another user is on the other side of the screen. Messages of love are hidden in the code.
breath.html, Entropy8Zuper!
Using a secret directory on the hell.com server, /NO/SUCH/PLACE/EXISTS/seasideMOTEL/, they exchanged what they describe as “interactive poems.” Some appear to be made in passionate haste, and others are finely wrought. One, “freezing,” features a scanned image of Auriea’s profile, so that it looks like she is pressed against the computer screen, trying to escape.
Read Rindon Johnson's essay "Re: skinonskinonskin".
“freezing,” from skinonskinonskin.
In 1999, Harvey and Samyn shared skinonskinonskin as a pay-per-view exhibition on hell.com. Users could access the work for a week for ten euros or buy lifetime unlimited access for one-hundred euros.
Upon logging in and navigating past a landing page that features the title skinonskinonskin carved into what looks like human flesh, visitors were offered a simple pop-up window with live links to each letter arranged chronologically like a timeline across its top.
skinonskinonskin was also shown at Postmasters gallery in April 2000 in the exhibition “Behind the Firewall,” a show of four installations that engaged the network.
Installation proposal for skinonskinonskin at Postmasters Gallery, image courtesy Postmasters Gallery, New York.
Installing skinonskinonskin at Postmasters Gallery, image courtesy of Postmasters Gallery, New York.
Installation view, “Behind the Firewall,” Postmasters Gallery, New York, April 2000, image courtesy of Postmasters Gallery, New York.
In total, skinonskinonskin includes twenty-five letters. As they play out, the respective work of Entropy8 and Zuper! blurs together and finally merges, and Harvey and Samyn grow closer in spite of their geographical distance. Ultimately, the work upends traditional ideas of physical intimacy. Putting the user in the role of recipient of their love letters, it allows one to feel a touch that runs through the wires, from a body that doesn’t end at its fingertips.
Timelapse GIF made while counting down to the launch of the Entropy8Zuper! website, March 14, 1999.