1/20/2012
In July 2010 I decided to begin photographing people that I follow on Twitter. The idea for this came at a moment when I realised I ha...
Chris Floyd talks about the inspiration behind his project to photograph 140 of his Twitter followers/followees
In July 2010 I decided to begin photographing people that I follow on
Twitter. The idea for this came at a moment when I realised I had not
seen or spoken to any of my best half a dozen real and actual friends
for over a month. Some of those people on Twitter I communicate with
several times a week, in bursts of 140 characters or less, and yet I had
never met any of them. As we are now well and truly living in a digital
age I am aware that this state of being is only going to deepen and the
traditional forms of friendship, although they will not go away anytime
soon, are going to have to make more room for the new way of doing
things.
Where Facebook might be considered as the place in which you
tell lies to all the people you went to school with, I had begun to
think of Twitter as the place where you tell the truth to all those that
you wish you’d gone to school with. The project rolled on indefinitely
for almost a year but when, one day, I counted up the number of
subjects to date and came to a number in the mid one hundred and
thirties, I immediately knew where this had to end. So here they are.
My new friends. 140 characters. No more and no less. ( text via 100fortycharacters.wordpress.com )
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