Say you're a talented and ambitious young Canadian photographer with a penchant for taking edgily cropped and vaguely Terry Richardson-esque flash-lit pictures of pretty hipster girls and guys doing sexy things. How do you manage to distinguish your online portfolio from all the other artists doing similar work these days? You can take the safe route and lay out a standard website with a boring old gallery section and a paragraph or two explaining your intentions—or you can do what Nico Stinghe did and call it a "documentary project", fill it with frames and teeny-tiny type and thumbnails, add a CV with sentences like "Befitting germane emotions at the moment of his visual depiction, his analytical notion of the bourgeois and plebian subjects are always spun into interesting cobwebs", and hope that it all looks provocative enough that visitors will risk a case of eyestrain and click on said thumbnails to get a better look at your work, which ends up having enough boobage to justify its confusing presentation. Hey, it worked for us!
· Nico Stinghe: AnotherSidewalk (anothersidewalk.tv)