Sculpture embodies lossy copying using much-copied house-key: "![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vNOPxjyTL6zVzQyjTy1E_ixoPz-vX9oe6n20n9IteTyxdodbVZ_AmCyoKC6GhzVe-ZzZ340YznmmiKCzPBV1FNn44XoAIvN_MxAMsLt5doS_tP2E__l0-2GjAd1frkwgDiNWLcEbLYoUXO4Yg2pkWF3FQ=s0-d)
Artist Daniel Bejar had a key copied and then a new key copied from it, and so on, until the information embodied in the original key had been lost. He calls the resulting piece 'The Visual Topography of a Generation Gap': 'A copy was made from my original apartment key, then a copy was made from
that copy. This process was repeated until the original keys information was
destroyed, resulting in the topography of a generation.'
Artist Daniel Bejar had a key copied and then a new key copied from it, and so on, until the information embodied in the original key had been lost. He calls the resulting piece 'The Visual Topography of a Generation Gap': 'A copy was made from my original apartment key, then a copy was made from
that copy. This process was repeated until the original keys information was
destroyed, resulting in the topography of a generation.'
'The Visual Topography of a Generation Gap'(#2, Brooklyn, NY)
(Thanks, Fipi Lele!)
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