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Associated Press  (click to enlarge)
A screen shot of the Google's Street View map feature shows a portion of an art project in Sampsonia Way in Pittsburgh
 
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Mike Benbow, Business Editor
benbow@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, November 16, 2008

Artists stage scenes to lurk in Google's Street View maps

PITTSBURGH -- Anyone using Google's Street View map feature to scan one downtown Pittsburgh street is bound to do a double-take.

Two 17th century swordsmen doing battle? An escape from a building using knotted sheets? A laser zapping a Steelers fan and a Cleveland Browns fan, rendering them love-struck and about to embrace?

That can't be real. But it is. And it isn't.

Google really did capture those scenes when it sent a car equipped with cameras down Pittsburgh's Sampsonia Way in May to take photographs for its online maps. But these images and most of the other scenes caught on Sampsonia were staged by artists Ben Kinsley and Robin Hewlett. The two set out to explore the boundaries of the real and virtual worlds as Pittsburgh was included in Street View.

The Google feature provides panoramic street-level photographs online so users can get a feel for wherever they might be heading.

Like many first-time Street View users, Kinsley and Hewlett, then roommates, typed in their address and found their house. Kinsley and Hewlett soon found themselves discussing surveillance and virtual reality, and began considering how they might explore those issues and Street View through art.

"But instead of dwelling on the darker undertones of these issues, we began to think about ways of playing with the system," Kinsley said in an e-mail interview. The "Street With a View" project was his master of fine arts thesis project at Carnegie Mellon University.

"We were interested in interjecting something staged, something fictional, into Street View and playing with -- and subtly questioning -- the notion of reality in something that we perceive as a factual representation of our world," said Kinsley, 26.

This idea draws some of its inspiration from the way that Google Street View has preserved many random, mundane moments in time as its cameras have swept through cities capturing images. In one city, a woman can be seen leaning over in the seat of pickup truck with its door open, inadvertently flashing her thong underwear. Elsewhere a man is climbing a building, apparently breaking in. Another photo in Street View finds a man passed out on the ground.

"We attempted a balance between the subtle and the spectacular," said Hewlett, 28. "Seen individually, any one of these things may not raise your curiosity that much ... but coupled together, you may start to question a little more."

Google -- whose own employees posed outside the company's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., as its Street View vehicle rolled by -- joined in the fun in Pittsburgh after Kinsley and Hewlett contacted the company. Google sent its cameras down Sampsonia on a prearranged day.

"There are all sorts of quirky things that appear organically in Street View, such as a giant rocking chair in Indiana or a wedding in France, which is why this art project was so fascinating," Google spokeswoman Elaine Filadelfo said.

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