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		<title>1,000,000 Giraffes: Art Project Taking Over the Web</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/8/1000000-giraffes-art-project-taking-over-t.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: 1,000,000 Giraffes: Art Project Taking Over the Web</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/8/1000000-giraffes-art-project-taking-over-t.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 22:07:54 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>One million giraffes: the art project that is taking over the web<br /><br />One man&#x27;s attempt to collect a million hand-created giraffes to prove the power of the internet is on target after the project caught the attention of Twitter and Facebook users<br /><br />Giraffe by Dawndelver, 21, from Southampton Photo: One Million Giraffes<br /><br />Giraffe by Anette, 23, from Trondheim, Norway Photo: One Million Giraffes<br /><br />Giraffe by Emily Vit, six, from Squamish, Canada Photo: One Million Giraffes<br /><br />More than 130,000 giraffe drawings and models have already been submitted to OneMillionGiraffes.com by people inspired to take up their pencils and paintbrushes in the name of collaborative online art.<br /><br />What started as an eccentric bet between two friends has grown into a minor web phenomena, with thousands of new giraffes posted on the website everyday.<br /><br />The entries range from colourful children&#x27;s scrawls to impressive watercolours, with a few arrangements of fruit and vegetables thrown in to boot.<br /><br />The 24-year-old web designer who devised the website said that he has been overwhelmed by the response to his project, which grew out of a conversation with his friend J rgen earlier this year about the creative potential of the web.<br /><br />We were just small-talking and discussed the Internet and how amazing it is. I proclaimed that anything is possible nowadays, there are no limits anymore, and said I could easily get one million of anything if I wanted to, Ola Helland, who lives in Stavanger, Norway, explained.<br /><br />J rgen refused to agree with me and said there was no way I could get one million giraffes. So we made a bet.<br /><br />Two days later I made the website almost as a joke just to play around with the idea. I posted the link on my Facebook and Twitter account thinking I would get 10-15 giraffes from my friends and then it would just die off.<br /><br />I went out for lunch and when I came back I had 60 giraffes. By the end of the day I had 134. I started to realise that I had started something I immediately lost control over.<br /><br />Under the rules of the bet all giraffes must be created by hand; any submissions drawn on computers or bought from shops are rejected.<br /><br />Mr Helland says he is now confident of hitting one million by the bet deadline of the end of next year. He has amassed 134,227 in a little over two months, leaving 494 days to collect the remaining 865,773.<br /><br />But what began as a silly art project had grown into something more meaningful, he said, showing how the internet could help spur traditional family activities and old-fashioned fun.<br /><br />It&#x27;s become a way of spreading joy and to get people to turn off their televisions and creating something real, he said.<br /><br />I love getting emails from parents and grandparents telling stories of how they sat down with their kids and fooled around with crayons for a few hours.<br /><br />Drawing, laughing and sharing something real with the people around them really seems to bound people together.<br /><br />Mr Helland is now appealing for Telegraph.co.uk readers to design their own giraffes to push him nearer the one million target.<br /><br />As well as the pleasure of winning the bet ( I will mention this to J rgen every single day for the rest of my life ), Mr Helland hopes that his whimsical project will do some concrete good.<br /><br />He is trying to attract a corporate sponsor to donate 1 to the World Wildlife Fund for every picture submitted, with the money used to protect giraffes in the wild.<br /><br />Giraffe by Anette, 23, from Trondheim, Norway Photo: One Million Giraffes<br /><br />Giraffe by Emily Vit, six, from Squamish, Canada Photo: One Million Giraffes<br /><br />LINK TO SUBMIT GIRAFFE ART WORK:<br /><br />http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/6081316/One-million-giraffes-the-art-project-that-is-taking-over-the-web.html<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/8/1000000-giraffes-art-project-taking-over-t.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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