The Lock in Part 3 Deviant Art Saint Punk

Social media/art website

DeviantArt
DeviantArt Logo.svg
DeviantArt screenshot.png
Type of business organisation Subsidiary

Blazon of site

Art display/Social networking service
Available in English language
Founded August vii, 2000; 21 years ago  (2000-08-07)
Area served Worldwide
Founder(s)
  • Scott Jarkoff
  • Matthew Stephens
  • Angelo Sotira
Parent Wix.com
URL www.deviantart.com
Commercial Yeah
Registration Optional
Launched August 7, 2000; 21 years ago  (2000-08-07)
Current status Active

DeviantArt (historically stylized every bit deviantART) is an online art community that features artwork, videography and photography. It was launched on August vii, 2000 by Angelo Sotira, Scott Jarkoff, and Matthew Stephens among others.

DeviantArt, Inc. is headquartered in the Hollywood area of Los Angeles, California.[1] Fella, a small, devil-esque robotic grapheme, was the official mascot of the website.[ii] DeviantArt had about 36 million visitors annually by 2008.[3] In 2010, DeviantArt users were submitting about i.iv million favorites and about 1.5 million comments daily.[iv] In 2011, it was the thirteenth largest social network with near 3.8 one thousand thousand weekly visits.[5] Several years later, in 2017, the site had more than 25 million members and more than than 250 million submissions.[6] On Feb 23, 2017, the company announced information technology was being acquired by Wix.com in a $36 million bargain.[7]

History [edit]

Creation [edit]

DeviantArt started as a site connected with people who took estimator applications and modified them to their own tastes, or who posted the applications from the original designs. Equally the site grew, members in general became known as artists and submissions equally arts.[8] [9] DeviantArt was originally launched on August seven, 2000, by Scott Jarkoff, Matt Stephens, Angelo Sotira and others, as part of a larger network of music-related websites called the Dmusic Network. The site flourished largely considering of its unique offer and the contributions of its core fellow member base and a team of volunteers afterwards its launch,[10] but was officially incorporated in 2001 most eight months after launch.[11]

DeviantArt was loosely inspired by projects like Winamp facelift, customize.org, deskmod.com, screenphuck.com, and skinz.org, all awarding skin-based websites. Sotira entrusted all public aspects of the project to Scott Jarkoff as an engineer and visionary to launch the early program. All three co-founders shared backgrounds in the awarding skinning community, simply information technology was Matt Stephens whose major contribution to DeviantArt was the suggestion to take the concept further than skinning and more than toward an art community. Many of the individuals involved with the initial development and promotion of DeviantArt withal hold positions with the project. Angelo Sotira currently serves as the chief executive officer of DeviantArt, Inc.[11] [12] [13]

On Nov 14, 2006, DeviantArt introduced the option to submit their works under Creative Commons licenses giving the artists the right to choose how their works can be used.[fourteen] A Creative Commons license is 1 of several public copyright licenses that permit the distribution of copyrighted works. On September 30, 2007, a picture category was added to DeviantArt, allowing artists to upload videos. An artist and other viewers can add annotations to sections of the film, giving comments or critiques to the creative person virtually a item moment in the film.[15] In 2007, DeviantArt received $3.5 million in Series A (starting time circular) funding from undisclosed investors,[xvi] and in 2013, it received $ten one thousand thousand in Serial B funding.[ citation needed ]

Mobile version [edit]

On December 4, 2014, the site unveiled a new logo and appear the release of an official mobile app on both iOS and Android,[17] released on Dec ten, 2014.[18]

On February 23, 2017, DeviantArt was acquired past Wix.com, Inc. for $36 million. The site plans to integrate DeviantArt and Wix functionality, including the ability to utilise DeviantArt resources on websites built with Wix, and integrating some of Wix'due south blueprint tools into the site.[nineteen]

As of March 1, 2017, Syrian arab republic was banned from accessing DeviantArt's services entirely, citing U.s. and Israeli sanctions and aftermath on Feb 19, 2018. After Syrian user Mythiril used a VPN to access the site and disclosed the geoblocking in a journal, titled "The hypocrisy of deviantArt", DeviantArt ended the geoblocking except for commercial features.[20]

Since autumn of 2018, spambots accept been hacking into an indeterminately large number of long-inactive accounts and placing spam Weblinks in their victims' Nearly sections (formerly known as DeviantIDs), where users of the site display their public contour information. An ongoing investigation into this matter began in January 2019.[21]

Copyright and licensing issues [edit]

There is no review for potential copyright and Creative Commons licensing violations when a work is submitted to DeviantArt, and then potential violations can remain unnoticed until reported to administrators using the machinery bachelor for such issues.[22] Some members of the community have been the victims of copyright infringement from vendors using artwork illegally on products and prints, as reported in 2007.[23] [24] The reporting system in which to counteract copyright infringement directly on the site has been field of study to a plethora of criticism from members of the site, given that it may accept weeks, or even a month before a filed complaint for copyright infringement is answered.

Contests for companies and academia [edit]

Due to the nature of DeviantArt as an art community with a worldwide reach, companies utilise DeviantArt to promote themselves and create more advertizement through contests. CoolClimate is a research network connected with the University of California, and they held a contest in 2012 to accost the bear on of climate change. Worldwide submissions were received, and the winner was featured in The Huffington Postal service.[25]

Various motorcar companies have held contests. Dodge ran a contest in 2012 for fine art of the Dodge Sprint and over 4,000 submissions were received.[26] Winners received cash and particular prizes, and were featured in a gallery at Contrivance-Chrysler headquarters.[27] Lexus partnered with DeviantArt in 2013 to run a contest for cash and other prizes based on their Lexus IS pattern; the winner's pattern became a modified Lexus IS and was showcased at the SEMA 2013 prove in Los Angeles, California.[28]

DeviantArt too hosts contests for upcoming movies, such as Riddick. Fan art for Riddick was submitted, and director David Twohy chose the winners, who would receive greenbacks prizes and another DeviantArt-related prizes, equally well as having their artwork fabricated into official fan-art posters for events.[29] [30] A like contest was held for Night Shadows where winners received cash and other prizes.[31] [32]

Video games also conduct contests with DeviantArt, such as the 2013 Tomb Raider contest. The winner had their art fabricated into an official print sold internationally at the Tomb Raider store and received cash and other prizes. Other winners as well received greenbacks and DeviantArt-related prizes.[33]

Website [edit]

The site has over 358 million images which accept been uploaded by its over 35 million registered members.[34] Past July 2011, DeviantArt was the largest online art customs.[35] Members of DeviantArt may go out comments and critiques on private difference pages,[36] [37] allowing the site to be called "a [gratuitous] peer evaluation application".[38] Along with textual critique, DeviantArt now offers the option to leave a small pic equally a comment.[39] This tin can be achieved using an pick of DeviantArt Muro, which is a browser-based cartoon tool that DeviantArt has developed and hosts. Notwithstanding, just members of DeviantArt can salve their piece of work as deviations. Some other feature of Muro is what is chosen "Redraw"; it records the user every bit they draw their prototype, and and so the user tin can post the entire process as a film deviation.[40] Some artists in belatedly 2013 began experimenting with the use of breakfast cereal as the subject of their pieces, although this trend has only started spreading.[41]

Individual deviations are displayed on their own pages, with a list of statistical information most the epitome, too as a place for comments by the artist and other members, and the option to share through other social media (Facebook, Twitter, etc.).[42] Prior to Version ix, Deviations were required to be organized into categories when a fellow member uploaded an image and this allowed DeviantArt's search engine to find images concerning similar topics.[43]

Individual members can organize their ain deviations into folders on their personal pages.[38] The member pages (profiles) show a member's personally uploaded deviations and journal postings.[44] Journals are like personal blogs for the member pages, and the choice of topic is up to each fellow member; some apply it to talk nigh their personal or art-related lives, others utilise it to spread sensation or marshal back up for a cause.[45] Too displayed are a member's favorites, a collection of other users' images from DeviantArt that a fellow member saves to its own folder.[46] Some other thing establish on the profile page is a fellow member'due south watchers; a member adds another member to their spotter list in lodge to be notified when that member uploads something.[45] The watcher notifications are gathered in a member's Message Centre with other notices, like when other users comment on that member's deviations, or when the member's prototype has been put in someone'due south favorites.[45]

Members can build groups that any registered member of the site can join. These groups are usually based on an artist's chosen medium and content. Some examples of these are Literature (poetry, prose, etc.), Drawing (traditional, digital, or mixed-media), Photography (macro, nature, style, stills), and many others. Within these groups are where they practice collaborations and have their fine art featured and introduced to artists of the same kind.

DeviantArt does not allow pornographic, sexually explicit and/or obscene cloth to be submitted;[47] still, "tasteful" nudity is allowed, even as photographs.[48] To view mature artwork and content, members must be at least eighteen years of historic period and to enable the content, they have to make an account.

In order to communicate on a more individual level, Notes tin exist sent between private members, like an email within the site.[45] The other opportunities for communication betwixt members are DeviantArt's forums, for more structured, long-term discussions, and conversation rooms, for group instant messaging.[49]

Versions [edit]

DeviantArt has been revising the website in "versions", with each version releasing multiple new features. Coincidentally, the third, fourth and 5th versions of the site were all released on August vii, the "altogether" of the website's founding.[ citation needed ]

Version Release Changes
one Baronial vii, 2000 The site goes public as part of the Dmusic Network.
2 February 5, 2002 In version 2, browsing was made easier.[l]
iii August vii, 2003 The "extreme speed and reliability increase" was accompanied past some bugs that had to be fixed.[51] For the release of version 3, at that place were numerous free giveaways.[52]
iv August 7, 2004 In version 4, the chat client called dAmn was added to the site.[53]
v Baronial 7, 2006 In version 5, each deviant has a Prints account, through which they may sell prints of their works for money, receiving twenty% of the profits.[ clarification needed ] Users tin can as well obtain Premium Prints Business relationship offering l% of the profits and an immediate bank check of material submitted for sales. Earlier version 5 of DeviantArt, users did not take by default admission to this service and it had to be obtained separately. Past paying for a subscription, a deviant could also sell their work for 50% of each sale.[54]
half-dozen July 10, 2008 In this revision, the message center, front end page and footer were revamped, and users could now customize the DeviantArt navigation toolbar. The blueprint style of the site was slightly modified equally well.[55]
6.1 Early 2009 In this revision, there is a slight change of design and easier search options, in improver to users being given more options to customize their profiles, and stacks are added to the bulletin centre afterward in 2010.
vii May 18, 2010 Version 7 features a new smaller header design and the removal of the search bar except on the home folio. The staff later made updates to Version 7, including calculation a search bar to every folio.
viii October 15, 2014
(updated Dec four, 2014)
Version viii features a re-styled header, removal of the big footer, updated browsing interface, improver of "watch feed", a news feed containing a summary of postings past watched users, status updates, and additions to user collections.

Eclipse (Version 9) [edit]

In early Nov 2018, DeviantArt released a promo site showcasing a new update, titled 'Eclipse'. The site showed that the update would include a minimalist design strategy, a dark style option, modified CSS editing, improved filtering through a 'Love Meter,' profile headers, and other cosmetic changes and improvements. The update would also include no third-party advertisements and improved features for the site's Core users.[56]

On November 14, 2018, a beta version of the Eclipse site was fabricated available for Core Members who marked their accounts for beta testing.[57] As of November 21, 2018, the site reported that over 4,000 users tried Eclipse and that the site received almost 1,700 individual feedback reports; these included bug reports, feature requests, and general commentary.[58] On March 6, 2019, DeviantArt officially released Eclipse to all users, with a toggle to switch dorsum to the onetime site.

On May 20, 2020, the previous User Interface was discontinued from access, leaving only Eclipse bachelor.[59]

Live events [edit]

deviantART Summit [edit]

On June 17 and 18, 2005, DeviantArt held their first convention, the deviantART Acme, at the Palladium in the Hollywood expanse of Los Angeles, California, U.s.a.. The peak consisted of several exhibitions by numerous artists, including artscene groups onetime and new at about 200 different booths. Giant projection screens displayed artwork as information technology was beingness submitted alive to DeviantArt, which was receiving 50,000 new images daily at the time.

deviantART World Tour [edit]

Starting May 13, 2009, DeviantArt embarked on a world tour, visiting cities around the world, including Sydney, Singapore, Warsaw, Istanbul, Berlin, Paris, London, New York City, Toronto and Los Angeles. During the world tour, the new "Portfolio" feature of DeviantArt was previewed to attendees.[60] [61]

"Birthday Bashes" and deviantMEET [edit]

Occasionally, DeviantArt hosts a meeting for members to come together in real life and interact, substitution, and have fun. There have been meetings for the birthday of DeviantArt, called "Birthday Bashes", too as simple full general become-togethers effectually the world. In 2010, European DeviantArt members held a deviantMEET to celebrate DeviantArt's birthday in Baronial.[62] At that place was also a commemoration that year in the Firm of Blues in Hollywood, California.[63]

See likewise [edit]

  • Concept art
  • Digital art
  • Fan art
  • Tumblr
  • Pixiv—like Japanese community
  • Threadless
  • Wix.com

References [edit]

  1. ^ "DeviantArt, Inc." Businessweek Investing. Accessed November 9, 2008.
  2. ^ "Official Fella file by $devart on DeviantArt". Devart.deviantart.com. February 21, 2007. Retrieved September 17, 2012.
  3. ^ "DeviantArt attracts almost 40m visitors online yearly". Siteanalytics.compete.com. Archived from the original on November ten, 2011. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  4. ^ "DeviantArt 10th Birthday Bash at Firm of Blues – Angelo Sotira's Closing Oral communication PT 2". YouTube. Archived from the original on June eleven, 2014.
  5. ^ Matt Rosoff (July 27, 2011). "These 19 Social Networks Are Bigger Than Google+". Businessinsider.com. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  6. ^ "DeviantArt - Career Page". deviantart.jobs. Archived from the original on Oct 26, 2020. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
  7. ^ Lunden, Ingrid. "Website builder Wix acquires art community DeviantArt for $36M". TechCrunch . Retrieved Feb 23, 2017.
  8. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Production of the Web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.29
  9. ^ "DeviantArt FAQ - What is a difference?". Retrieved April 27, 2015.
  10. ^ Angelo Sotira (April 10, 2003). "spyed's DeviantArt Journal". Retrieved December 22, 2007.
  11. ^ a b Cyan Banister. "TechCrunch".
  12. ^ "deviantArt: Nearly DeviantArt's Team Cadre". Retrieved December 21, 2007.
  13. ^ "News: TMD: ten Ten 10". News.deviantart.com. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  14. ^ "News: New Submission Process... Alive!". Retrieved December 21, 2007.
  15. ^ "News: Now Playing: DeviantArt Film!". Retrieved December 21, 2007.
  16. ^ Kaplan, David (June 22, 2007). "Online Art Community DeviantArt Secures $3.v One thousand thousand In Start Round". Paidcontent.org. Archived from the original on January 11, 2014. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
  17. ^ "With Its New App, DeviantArt Finally Has A Mobile Place For Those 65 Million Monthly Visitors". Fast Company. December iv, 2014.
  18. ^ "Boldly Facing The Time to come". spyed's journal. deviantArt. Retrieved Dec 4, 2014.
  19. ^ "Website builder Wix acquires art community DeviantArt for $36M". TechCrunch . Retrieved February 23, 2017.
  20. ^ "The hypocrisy of deviantArt". DeviantArt. February 15, 2018. Archived from the original on April 26, 2018. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
  21. ^ "URGENT: Invasion of the Old Account Hijackers". Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  22. ^ "FAQ #155: How do I report a submission which I recall breaks the rules? on DeviantArt Help and FAQ". Retrieved January viii, 2008.
  23. ^ "Fine art Theft Scandals Rock deviantArt". PlagiarismToday. May 29, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  24. ^ Weber, Sarah (May 5, 2014). "DeviantART clarifies it doesn't sell artists' piece of work after Hot Topic shirt debacle". The Daily Dot . Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  25. ^ "Christos Lamprianidis: CoolClimate Art Contest Winner: What Motivated Me". Huffingtonpost.com. October 7, 2010. Retrieved June fifteen, 2014.
  26. ^ "Dodge Dart looks to score during NFL opener – Straight Marketing News". Dmnews.com. September 5, 2012. Retrieved June fifteen, 2014.
  27. ^ "Dodge Sprint Inspired Past Y'all Contest by Moonbeam13 on deviantART". DeviantArt.com. April 17, 2012. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  28. ^ "Lexus IS Design Competition by Moonbeam13 on deviantART". Moonbeam13.deviantart.com. July 12, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  29. ^ "Riddick 'Dominion the Dark' Winners by Moonbeam13 on deviantART". Moonbeam13.deviantart.com. August 29, 2013. Retrieved June xv, 2014.
  30. ^ "The Riddick 'Rule the Dark Fan Fine art Contest' by Moonbeam13 on deviantART". Moonbeam13.deviantart.com. July xviii, 2013. Retrieved June fifteen, 2014.
  31. ^ "Dark Shadows: The Barnabas Portrait Project by Moonbeam13 on deviantART". Moonbeam13.deviantart.com. April nine, 2012. Retrieved June xv, 2014.
  32. ^ "The Barnabas Portrait Project Winners Announcement past Moonbeam13 on deviantART". Moonbeam13.deviantart.com. May 11, 2012. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  33. ^ "Tomb Raider Reborn Competition by Ayame-Kenoshi on deviantART". Ayame-kenoshi.deviantart.com. February 1, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  34. ^ "DeviantArt.com". Retrieved December 7, 2015.
  35. ^ Salah, Alkim; Bart Buter, Nick Dijkshoorn, Davide Modolo, Quang Nguyen, Sander van Noort, Bart van de Poel, AlbertAli Salah (July 2011). "Explorative Visualization and Analysis of a Social Network for the Arts: The Case of DeviantArt". Journal of Convergence two (1): ane–9. Retrieved September 24, 2012. p.1
  36. ^ Mccreight, Brian M. "A Comparison of Peer Evaluation: The Evaluation App versus DeviantArt". Purdue University. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.32
  37. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Fine art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Product of the Web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.33
  38. ^ a b Mccreight, Brian M.. "A Comparison of Peer Evaluation: The Evaluation App versus DeviantArt". Purdue University. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.33
  39. ^ Wang, Jennifer (2-24-2011). "THE DEVIANT EXPERIENCE". Entrepreneur 39 (2): 22–28. ISSN 0163-3341. Retrieved November 24, 2012. p.27
  40. ^ Zukerman, Erez. "Sketch, Pigment, and Share Online for Gratis with DeviantArt Muro". PCWorld. Retrieved Oct six, 2012.
  41. ^ Reinstein, Due south.T. (2013). Trends in Postmoderish Fine art (& the Procurers thereof). New York: Penguin. ISBN978-0385376938.
  42. ^ Mccreight, Brian Yard.. "A Comparison of Peer Evaluation: The Evaluation App versus DeviantArt". Purdue University. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.34
  43. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Production of the Web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.34-37
  44. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Fine art, Creating Infrastructure: deviantART and the Product of the Spider web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.31,34
  45. ^ a b c d Perkel, Daniel. "Making Art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Production of the Web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.34
  46. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Production of the Web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p34
  47. ^ DeviantArt FAQ: What is Mature Content? on the DeviantArt Help Center.
  48. ^ "What is DeviantArt's policy around 'sexual themes'?" on the DeviantArt Help Center.
  49. ^ Perkel, Daniel. "Making Art, Creating Infrastructure: DeviantArt and the Production of the Spider web". Berkeley CA. Retrieved September 28, 2012. p.35
  50. ^ "News: OMG OMG OMG". February 5, 2002. Retrieved December 26, 2007.
  51. ^ jark (August 31, 2003). "DAv3 September Status Update, Issues Fixes and More than". deviantart.com . Retrieved December 7, 2015.
  52. ^ "News: deviantArt Passes The Terrible Twos, Turns 3!". Retrieved Dec 21, 2007.
  53. ^ "News: deviantART v4; Fournando be dAmned". News.deviantart.com. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  54. ^ Angelo Sotira. "Spyed's DeviantArt Periodical: deviantART v5 Release Notes". Retrieved December 21, 2007.
  55. ^ DeviantArt, Inc. "News: deviantArt Version 6". Retrieved July ten, 2008.
  56. ^ https://world wide web.deviantarteclipse.com/
  57. ^ "BETA Test: DeviantArt Eclipse past danlev on DeviantArt". www.deviantart.com.
  58. ^ "Thank you for Your Feedback on Eclipse! by Heidi on DeviantArt". world wide web.deviantart.com.
  59. ^ "New DeviantArt Launch: Tardily May". DeviantArt Help Middle . Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  60. ^ DeviantArt (May 8, 2009). "deviantART World Tour 2009".
  61. ^ DeviantArt. "#hq on deviantArt".
  62. ^ "Browsing DeviantMEETS on deviantART". DeviantArt.com. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  63. ^ "deviantART'southward tenth BirthdAy Bash! Party with us! by Heidi on deviantART". Heidi.deviantart.com. Retrieved June 15, 2014.

External links [edit]

  • Official website

burgessnare1947.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeviantArt

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