
by Alex Galloway, Mark Tribe & Martin Wattenberg
"The elegant StarryNight interface is both a nod to van Gogh's 19th-century masterpiece
and a 21st-century experiment in making the Rhizome community a generator for art."
—I.D. Magazine, June, 2001
"StarryNight is the way into an archive of messages held by Rhizome. At
a time when the world is looking at the Net and seeing a welter of
ballooning stock options, the idea of visualising part of it as a
thousand points of light harks back to its early dreams, in which it
would take us to a high dimension, and everybody in it would be a star."
—Independent on Sunday (London), July 18, 1999
Description
When a new text is read for the first time on the Rhizome website, it appears on StarryNight as a dim star.
Each time a text gets read again—by any Internet user around the world—the
corresponding star gets a bit brighter. Over time, the page comes to
resemble a starry night sky, with bright stars corresponding to the most
popular texts in the database, and dim stars corresponding to less-popular
ones.
Dragging the mouse over one of the stars brings up a pop-up list of
keywords that the corresponding text shares with other texts. Select a
keyword in the pop-up list to draw a constellation linking all the stars
that share that keyword.
StarryNight depends on two pieces of original software: a set of Perl
scripts that sort texts by keyword and record their individual hits, and
a Java applet that filters this information to draw stars and
constellations.
Stats
Technology used: Perl and Java
Number of stars: 2000
Age of oldest star: February 5th, 1996
New stars added: 5 per week
Exhibition History
I.D. Magazine (Software Applications category Silver medal winner, "2001 I.D. Interactive Media Design Review"), June 2001.
New Museum, New York, November 16 - December 17, 2000.
SIGGRAPH 2000, New Orleans, July 2000.
ZKM (Center for Art and Media), Karlsruhe, Germany, 1999.
Rhizome.org, June, 1999 - present.
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