Random Interference is a web-project (launched in 2012) and time-based installation that explores the afterlife of images and the experience of looking at photographs as a disruptive encounter. Inspired by my Photographic Interference project, approximately 100 image fragments from newspapers and online sources are randomly played in a continuously changing sequence mimicking our experience of encountering photographs both online and off. I incorporate my gaze as both imagemaker and consumer.
To situate the project in the present, I continually add images from the international media to the sequence.