Screen Walk with Lauren A. Miller

06:00pm - 07:30pm, Wed 11 Dec 2024

Join Lauren A. Miller in celebrating the creativity of AR filters and selfie culture as well as their flaws, as we say goodbye to Meta’s SparkAR

A screenshot of the artist with a filter augmented the face

Screen Walk with Lauren A. Miller

6:00pm, Wed 11 Dec 2024

Join Lauren A. Miller in celebrating the creativity of AR filters and selfie culture as well as their flaws, as we say goodbye to Meta’s SparkAR

Through the process of applying augmented reality (AR) filters to herself as researcher-cum-participant and recording the process, Lauren A Miller’s research grounds the ephemeral form of augmented reality (AR) filters into more stable artefacts.  

Using 12 distinct AR filter types before the platform is discontinued, this Screen Walk will critique AR filters of digital beauty standards, through a feminist lens. The discussion will explore the legitimacy of using filters as a content creation or artist expression to subvert beauty ideals, while also considering the effects of Meta’s decision to remove this technology from its platforms from January 2025.

An image of the artist with an instagram filter over the top

Biography

Lauren A. Miller is currently a confirmed PhD student at Swinburne University of Technology. Prior to returning to study, Lauren spent almost a decade working in marketing and social media management. Lauren's PhD project examines Instagram’s augmented reality filters through a socio-technical lens, with a focus on how the technology impacts beauty and surgery culture. Lauren's research interest include feminist approaches to social media, digital privacy/ surveillance, digital beauty cultures, theories of the technology user as cyborg, and digital embodiment praxis.

Screen Walks is a new series of live-streamed artist/researcher-led explorations of online spaces and artistic strategies designed to illuminate a thriving – often overlooked – digital cultural scene. A new online collaboration between The Photographers’ Gallery, UK and Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland.