My TV has been malfunctioning recently to create beautiful visual glitches. I’m enjoying the idea of it becoming an autonomous art generating machine. The glitches remind me of Brian Eno’s 7 million paintings, Autechre and Casey Reas’s generative art amongst others. Each of these artists use algorithms with a sensitive dependence upon initial conditions. The process produces a cornucopia of results which although preconceived programatically often render random unforeseen artifacts as the program runs. Their talent is in giving this randomness meaning.
The computer as a result becomes part author in the creative process. As a designer who writes code, I find this approach to creative expression fascinating. There is an exactness to programming. Syntax is formal and a rogue ; or missed { means the difference between an idea compiling or not. It is scientific. On the other side there is subjective beauty. An oft unquantifiable, emotion response. It is artistic. The computer has engendered a new breed of creative. A technological astuteness with a sensitive dependence upon emotional conditions.
There are however few truly original talents who manage to balance the left and right hemispheres with apparent ease which is not surprising given many people’s natural bias for one or other. I’m thinking of Maeda, Levin, Nakamura, Rokeby. I asked David Rokeby about this diversity of discipline.
When compared to hand rendered work, programs can run infinite times producing precisely the same result each time. The hand of the computer is plain to see.
Hand rendering however cannot achieve this and as such displays wonderful qualities of uniqueness, the one off. The hand of the human is plain to see. .
In some ways randomness is a way for the programmer/artist to imbue a sense of one-offness. It can bring sterile exactness to life, add unknowns and in doing so reveal a more humanistic sense of involvement or as Rokeby explained more poetically;
So as the TV continues to blink, stutter and scramble through an episode of Stars on Skates or some other guff the broadcasters typically push out I’m rather more interested in the ingenious patterns a malfunctioning chip has happened to create.
Below is a collection of some of these which made “Homes under the Hammer” actually worth watching. Do I get it fixed?… not quite yet.
If you have examples of creative serendipity drop a comment below.
04/03/2009 @ 18:45
ooh delicious! sorry to hear about your telly though, thanks for sharing. They are delightfully pure-glitch.
22/05/2009 @ 22:00
what a coincidence! i was always fascinated by the glitches caused by my scratched dvds, the images never repeat, the unpredictability never fail to surprise. Now i’m using those images to do a series of “glitches” paintings. thanks for sharing, awesome !
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