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Art

Posted by Eliza Williams, 17 August 2011, 16:30    Permalink    Comments (3)

Earlier this summer we featured Jeremy Hutchison’s Err art project on the CR blog, which invited factory workers to create ‘incorrect’ versions of the products they make every day. For his latest project, Extra Extra, Hutchison is requesting you to join in, by sharing headlines from your life that may eventually be turned into real newspaper sandwich boards…

To take part in the project, you simply have to share your news via the Extra Extra Facebook page (here). Hutchison will then pass selected headlines onto a signwriter for the Evening Standard who will turn them into official ES posters. The resulting sandwich boards will then be displayed at the Southbank Centre in London on the last weekend of August (27-28th), as part of the Festival of Britain celebrations.

“We’re the third biggest nation of Twitter users,” says Hutchison. “The YouTube slogan ‘broadcast yourself’ has become the mantra of a British generation. Everyone’s a journalist, and everything’s news. So, what if you clashed the traditional language of a centralised news source with the deregulated mayhem of online chatter?"

Here are some example boards that Hutchison has mocked up. So far on the Facebook page, people are sharing everything from the political – “Jo Avery thinks the train far rises suck” – to the banal – “Julia Vogl is contemplating another slice of pie”. Join in the fun here.

See more of Hutchison's work at jeremyhutchison.com.

 

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3 Comments

The "Err" project feels far superior. Simply looking at the images I thought this was a Photoshoppy student project – having a pop at the banality of Tweets and status updates seems fairly trite. But they will look fairly convincing when printed and I can imagine getting tricked into half-reading them before realising the joke.
Gavin
2011-08-17 17:29:20


this has been done before.
dan
2011-08-22 12:19:07


Funny. I read this as a comment on how banal the most dramatic of news come across when you see it written like that nowadays. How all personal emotion is drained out and you are left with something emotionally flat. Yes, it's kind of flat but isn't that the point?
Nina Rodin
2011-09-05 12:24:32


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