Instagram’s CEO, Mike Krieger, mentioned in an interview with Hans Ulrich-Obrist for 032c that he sees the sphere as ever expanding for emerging talent, and how it opens up a different (either ‘real’ intimate or ‘fake’ intimate as with the Ulman case) area for being personable and bringing context to your work. “I’m very interested in ways of playing with medium to mess with your usual expectations,” Krieger told Obrist. “For example, one sculptor that I really love is Ricky Swallow, and he posts quite often on Instagram. So I understand his sculpture and his way of seeing far more now, because I get to see how he interacts with the world.” But what about the other level of artistry, that of art being created almost merely for the sake of being Instagrammed? Set designer Robert Storey, a sculpture graduate from CSM who counts Vogue, Nike and Christopher Kane among his clients, admits that he often gets commissioned to create a set with the photographic outcome in mind. “I think Instagram has been huge for me,” he told us last year. “Quite a few times, brands have come to me and they want me to create an ‘Instagram cool’ image. So they want me to make a set that people are going to want to take a picture of and put on Instagram. That’s what makes it timeless, and that’s what gives it purpose or relevance.”