Hummingbird clock; ca. 1870 - B. Bontems.
In museum Speelklok in Utrecht, Netherlands
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Hummingbird clock; ca. 1870 - B. Bontems.
In museum Speelklok in Utrecht, Netherlands
Lawrence Abu Hamdan: Hummingbird Clock, 2016. Installation at Derby Square, Liverpool Biennial 2016.
Opposite Liverpool’s law courts, Lawrence Abu Hamdan’s Hummingbird Clock, a tree of binoculars resembling CCTV cameras, keeps watch over the Town Hall’s clock. TheHummingbird Clock is a new kind of public time piece that exists physically and online. It is designed as a tool for investigations into civil and human rights violations and state corruption: recording the second by second variations in the buzz made by the electrical grid, and making that publicly available to anyone who might need it. For over 10 years, the UK government has been using this humming sound as a surveillance tool. Nearly all recordings made within earshot of this almost-silent humming can be forensically analysed to determine time and date, and whether the recording has been edited or altered. This technique has, so far, only ever been used by the state, but it can now be accessed by anyone who might need it at www.hummingbirdclock.info.