Salad Fingers: Pre-YouTube digital uncanny and the ‘weird’ future of animation

J. Balanzategui, C. Albarrán-Torres
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Abstract

In 2004, artist David Firth launched the lo-fi animation Salad Fingers in the user-generated content sharing platform Newgrounds. The series, focused on a strange, unsettling narrative about a character that acts as a child but commits unhinged violent acts, went on to become viral in the earliest days of YouTube. Created with the software Flash (launched by Macromedia and then acquired by Adobe), which generates vector images, Salad Fingers is a significant stylistic and generic contribution to the early period of participatory digital cultures. The series operates as a bridge between analogue and digital artforms that privilege the sensorial over narrative cohesion, while also cultivating a distinctive ‘uncanny-weird’ mode tied to early participatory digital cultures, trends that perdure in contemporary animation. We articulate how Salad Fingers operates in the distinctive ‘digital uncanny’, an aesthetic and cultural mode that would become pervasive in visual media cultures on YouTube and beyond.
沙拉手指YouTube之前的数字不可思议和动画的 "怪异 "未来
2004 年,艺术家大卫-费斯(David Firth)在用户生成内容共享平台 Newgrounds 上推出了低保真动画《沙拉手指》(Salad Fingers)。该系列动画讲述了一个奇怪的、令人不安的故事:一个角色像个孩子,但会做出疯狂的暴力行为。Salad Fingers》是利用生成矢量图像的软件 Flash(由 Macromedia 推出,后被 Adobe 收购)制作的,在风格和通用性方面对早期的参与式数字文化做出了重要贡献。该系列在模拟和数字艺术形式之间架起了一座桥梁,这种艺术形式重视感官而非叙事的连贯性,同时还培养了一种与早期参与式数字文化相关的独特的 "不可思议的怪异 "模式,这种趋势在当代动画中依然存在。我们阐述了《沙拉手指》如何在独特的 "数字不可思议 "中运作,这种美学和文化模式将在 YouTube 及其他视觉媒体文化中普遍存在。
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