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Photo credits: Marco Pezzati
Reflections is a generative art installation designed for the Game Happens! 2015 conference. This art installation is composed by a generative algorithm that draws lines on screen using geometry reflections and generates sounds using an oscillator synthetizer. The user interacts with the installation using the Leap Motion device. The user can manipulate the algorithm moving the left and right hands on the three axis. The size of the lines are based on the depth axis. The algorithm chooses the color of the lines and the user can select only the black color, closing his fingers into a fist.
Developing studio culture, rather than a game at this particular moment. That's the sort of business that's best done on a rocky beach with the spring sun shining on you.
Given that the circumstances were so nice, it's a little shocking for me to realize now that everybody looks utterly serious, like somebody just died. I swear it didn't feel like that at the time.
Photo credits: Marco Pezzati
ASCII Bash Art is a collection of micro-programs of one line of code, written in Bash, the shell language of UNIX-like computer operating systems. This project is part of a research activity of the artist started in 1996 to design micro codes capable to produce interesting behaviour in the field of visual art, conceptual art, and sound art. The choice of use Bash as language to produce these experiments is driven by a specific need to research art in computer aspects that are very far from the concept of art itself. The Bash language has been invented by Brian J. Fox in 1989, to use a computer providing specific instructions, without the usage of a graphic interface. The artwork produced using this computer language are based on ASCII characters, printed using infinite loops.
Photo credits: Marco Pezzati
ASCII Bash Art is a collection of micro-programs of one line of code, written in Bash, the shell language of UNIX-like computer operating systems. This project is part of a research activity of the artist started in 1996 to design micro codes capable to produce interesting behaviour in the field of visual art, conceptual art, and sound art. The choice of use Bash as language to produce these experiments is driven by a specific need to research art in computer aspects that are very far from the concept of art itself. The Bash language has been invented by Brian J. Fox in 1989, to use a computer providing specific instructions, without the usage of a graphic interface. The artwork produced using this computer language are based on ASCII characters, printed using infinite loops.