Counting to one million a totally pointless act. Nothing is gained by having someone count to one million.
So the answer is zero dollars, right? But then, a lot of work goes into counting to one million. Surely that work has to be worth something.
Fortunately, we need not speculate. In 2007 a man named Jeremy Harper counted to one million. He counted for 16 hours every day for 89 days. He live-streamed the whole thing.
I’ve been thinking about the value of pointless acts. About things like counting to a million: what their value is and why we do them.
I was looking back over the work I’d produced over the last year, planning to document the pieces I’d not written up, and realised this was a pretty consistent thread through all of them: pointless acts done simply to see what would happen if I did them.
Games that are unfeasible to play. Videos that are too long to watch. I like to see if they take on a life and meaning of their own with enough size, or enough time. I like sticking with an idea even when it’s going nowhere, simply to see what that nowhere looks like when you’re eyeball-deep in it.
Here’s what I’ve been up to.
Hourglasses
A combination with my fascination with futile acts and a sense of being lost in time culminated in this alternative-controller prototype.
To add a minute to the timer, you must wait a minute before turning the minutes glass. To add a tens-of-minutes, you must wait ten minutes, and have turned the minutes glass ten times.
The installation measures the amount of time that has been spent paying attention to time.