Social:Babylonokia
Babylonokia (also Babylon-Nokia, Alien-Mobile, and Cuneiform Mobile Phone) is a 2012 artwork[1] by Karl Weingärtner in the form of a clay tablet shaped like a mobile phone, its keys and screen showing cuneiform script.
Weingärtner created the work to represent the evolution of information transfer from the ancient world to the present.[2] Fringe scientists and pseudoarchaeology proponents[3] subsequently misrepresented a photograph of the artwork as showing an 800-year-old archaeological find;[1] that story was popularised in a video on the YouTube channel Paranormal Crucible[4] and led to the object being reported by some press sources as a mystery.[5]
Artwork
Weingärtner created the phone-styled clay tablet with cuneiform signs as a reaction to an exhibition at the Museum for Communication in Berlin titled From the Cuneiform to the SMS: Communication Once and Today, as well as the negative, global effects of information technology.[2] Cuneiform signals the beginning of written records of information.
The fact that it is a clay copy of what appears to be an Ericsson S868 mobile phone,[6] a model from the 1990s, had no meaning for the artist, who was using it as a metaphor for mobile devices in general.[3]
The work of art is unique and is kept by the artist in a special depot. It is available on request as a loan for museums and exhibitions. It is made from clay, weighs 91 grams (3¼ oz), and measures approximately 13.5 by 6.5 by 0.8 centimetres (5.31 by 2.56 by 0.31 in).[citation needed]
Misrepresentation
Weingärtner posted a photo of the image on Facebook as part of a sale of his work,[4] and a Facebook commenter coined the name "BabyloNokia".[4] Three years later, the image was posted to the Conspiracy Club website with the headline "800-Year-Old Mobile Phone Found In Austria? Check This Out."[4] The Express reposted Weingärtner's photo without attribution and claimed that the artifact had been dated to the 13th century BCE.[4]
Speaking about the image's use by fringe websites and the press, Weingärtner said "The photo was used without my knowledge and without my consent. [...] It’s not what I wanted. I do not believe in UFOs and I do not believe in aliens."[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Evon, Dan (4 January 2016). "FALSE: 800-Year-Old Alien Cellphone Found". http://www.snopes.com/alien-cellphone-found/. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Angeblich "Alien-Handy" in Österreich entdeckt - news.ORF.at". 31 December 2015. http://orf.at/stories/2316971/.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Centuries Old Cell-Phone Artifact Presents Modern Day Mystery". 19 January 2017. http://www.openpr.com/news/416272/Centuries-Old-Cell-Phone-Artifact-Presents-Modern-Day-Mystery-Award-Winning-Author-Dana-Lyons-Sees-The-Possibilities-In-Such-An-Impossible-Scenario.html.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Moye, David (11 January 2016). "Ancient Babylonian Cellphone Isn't Ancient, Babylonian Or A Phone". https://huffingtonpost.com/entry/ancient-babylonian-nokia-isnt-ancient-babylonian-nor-a-nokia_us_568d70abe4b0c8beacf5630b. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
- ↑ "Is this an 800-year-old mobile phone? (Video) - Canada Journal - News of the World". January 2016. http://canadajournal.net/science/is-this-an-800-year-old-mobile-phone-video-40526-2016/.
- ↑ Martin, Aaron (5 January 2016). "Archeologists Discover 800-Year-Old Cell Phone Tablet-Fiction!". https://www.truthorfiction.com/archeologists-discover-800-year-old-cell-phone-tablet/. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonokia.
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