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Art Commenting on Smartphone Life

Screen Shot 2015-08-27 at 6.50.44 PM

BY RAIN NOE From Core77

The drawbacks of the little glass rectangle in our pockets

When it comes to the unintended consequences of technology, no one could have foreseen the social side effects of smartphone usage. Marrying a small screen with mobile connectivity was meant to add convenience to our lives, and it predictably has; but it has also fundamentally changed how smartphone users communicate with people—to our detriment, I believe—and examples of this can be seen indoors and out, all around the world.

Part of me is relieved it isn’t just Americans. By now you’ve surely seen this photo, which began circulating earlier this year:

That’s Rembrandt’s The Shooting Company of Frans Banning Cocq and Willem van Ruytenburch, a/k/a The Night Watch, being ignored by schoolchildren in Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum. (One blogger insists they are merely consulting the Rijksmuseum’s app, but does not back this up with any evidence.) The internet being an unkind place, parodies of the scene began popping up:

Perhaps the funniest was this one, which arms the Night Watch characters with modern kit, transforming a pole-arm into a selfie stick and adding iPads and Beats headphones for good measure:

The American comedian Louis C.K. had this to say about the drawbacks to allowing children to learn early communication skills via a smartphone:

Of course, we all know it’s not only kids that are being held in the thrall of smartphones. The New Yorker periodically skewers a wider age range of society with its trenchant cover art and cartoons:

So that’s Western society for you. Meanwhile, how are things over in China, the world’s largest smartphone market? According to award-winning animator Xie Chenglin, not much better. This piece by Xie, which won Beijing’s Central Academy of Fine Arts Annual Award, is dialogue-free so anyone can understand it. It’s also marginally NSFW:

The term “phubbing” was first coined a few years ago and referred specifically to the act of snubbing someone in person by burying your phone in your nose instead. It’s since expanded to signify a person’s total absorption into their phone, allegedly “connecting” to people and places remote to their location, while completely oblivious to the actual world around them.
In broad strokes this isn’t a new phenomenon; when I was growing up we had a similar (but bulkier) device with black-hole-like properties, it was called a television. The people in the trance of one were known as “shut-ins” or “couch potatoes.” The key difference is that “phubbers” can practice their vice whilst remaining mobile. So I guess we have made some progress.

For more on this story go to: http://www.core77.com/posts/39974/Illustrators-Animators-and-Louis-CK-Art-Commenting-on-Smartphone-Life?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+core77%2Fblog+%28Core77.com%29

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