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I finally finished rendering the bigger version of the "wasp nest". I rendered it during the day and at night I switched the pc to standby. But the rendering time is still incredible: 712:04:58.8
That's about 30 days... but it was worth it ;)
This project is part of the CyberArts 2020 exhibition at the OK.
This multisensory project calls into question the concept of mass production by envisioning a potential future personalized perfumery. The Algorithmic Perfumery evaluates completed customer questionnaires and uses the data to generate a unique scent. The respondents’ feedback on this personal perfume is then in turn fed back into the program to refine the compositions developed by the algorithm. By interacting with the machine, users are given the power to play an active role in the creative process: the machine learns from their personal physical experiences and subjective (olfactory) sensations.
For more information please visit:
ars.electronica.art/keplersgardens/en/prix-interactive-art/
Credit: vog.photo
I think the shuffling pattern determines the frequency of transitions for a given bit. So far I've been using bit-order inversion (0xAC => 0x35) to shuffle bits. But I think something that moves bits in one area more and bits in another area less will give me a more useful distribution (rather than resembling white noise).
Basically, I've made a pseudorandom number generator for arbitrary bit lengths that has a perfect period, but it acts too much like white noise.
Algorithmically generated image created entirely from random numbers run through mathematical equations.
A collaboration with onformative.com. A pixelrow of a photograph is taken and then sorted by colorvalues. Done with processing.
ALGO 2017 hosted by Algorithms and Complexity Group of TU Wien, 4-8 September. Official photography: Nadja Meister. The photos have been released under CC BY 4.0.
Amandeep Singh Gill, United Nations Secretary-General's Envoy on Technology; Andrew Ng, Founder, DeepLearning.AI, USA; Dina Ercilia Boluarte, President of Peru; Ilan Goldfajn, President, Inter-American Development Bank, Washington DC; Jose Raul Mulino Quintero, President of Panama; Marisol Argueta de Barillas, Head of the Regional Agenda, Latin America; Member of the Executive Committee, World Economic Forum; Mohamed Irfaan Ali, President of the Co-operative Republic of Guyana; Nacho De Marco, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, BairesDev, USA; Ronaldo Lemos, Chief Scientific Officer, ITS-Rio, Brazil; Tracy Francis, Senior Partner; Managing Partner, Latin America, McKinsey & Company, Brazil; speaking in New Algorithm for Latin America session at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, 22/1/2025, 20:00 – 22:00 at Congress Centre - Parsenn/Pischa. Dinner. Copyright: World Economic Forum / Sandra Blaser
I'm thrilled. A computer algorithm has chosen exactly 100 of my photos to be in the club known as explore. This would not be a big deal, but I love that number 100, and it does make such a nice square.
The 100th photo is a picture of hot air.
My most viewed photo is not part of the collection.
My most "Interesting" photo is not part of the collection.
And I don't choose favorites among my shots.
See them here, without clicking on the disorganized links that Big Huge Labs supplies. (And I can't figure out which one is missing from this search!)
Algorithmic art created with Processing using blue noise dot patterns, wave functions, and various other computational techniques.
I keep telling myself it's time to retool this generative system--use functions more complicated than simple sine waves, different shapes--but when I set out to retool, I discover aspects I hadn't yet explored.
The series Sturdy, Rendition, Fuste, Eyeteeth, and Elpenor do use many more points than earlier images. Voluntad (like Chupatintas and a few others) uses different color rules. Otherwise, these are all variations on a basic generative system.
See www.openprocessing.org/visuals/?visualID=15891 for code used to generate "dot pattern" images.
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
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My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
www.saatchiart.com/celestialart
www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop
FOLLOW ME:
www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
Please follow, like and leave a comment for more exiting future notifications.
My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
www.saatchiart.com/celestialart
www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop
FOLLOW ME:
www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
Variations in pattern development through scripting, also some more general explorations in geometry and part to whole relationships
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Algorithmes Sérigraphiques
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Day 4 and we have started printing, yeah !
Algorithmes Sérigraphiques is a week long creative workshop using Processing to generate images and silk screen to print the results.
Un workshop d'une semaine avec du Processing et de la sérigraphie.
For further info/Plus d'infos : www.freeartbureau.org/blog/
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr search results. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
Please follow, like and leave a comment.
My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
FOLLOW ME:
www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
Pictures from YRS 2014
"Young Rewired State is an independent global network of kids aged 18 and under who have taught themselves to program computers. We introduce these children to like-minded peers at events around the world where they use freely available open data to make websites, apps and algorithms to solve real world challenges"
Panel Algorithmic Business Strategies - If everything's being uploaded and shared, what might be next?
Moderator - Mercedes Bunz
Speaker - Dirk Baecker, Jean-Paul Schmetz, - Sean Park, Tom Fuerstner
Wilkinson Eyre's egg was bathed in light that cycled through the spectrum. Here it is bathed in red.
A collaboration with onformative.com. A pixelrow of a photograph is taken and then sorted by colorvalues. Done with processing.
This is three runs of Wolfram's "Rule 110" cellular automaton. Each run is assigned to a color channel - R, G, and B. Each color began with two pixels turned "on": one in the upper middle, and one that they all shared in the upper right. The sum of all the channels maxes out at 255, so pixels with more colors turned on have a lower intensity. This helps the interference patterns become more apparent. I really like how the encounters propagate backwards when a color hits the uniform white section.
Code is here, I put it in a file called GOL.py and typed: python GOL.py > p.ppm && convert p.ppm p.png