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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:

www.asarstudios.com

springsofeden.com

 

Visit my portfolio sites:

celestial-images.pixels.com

www.saatchiart.com/celestialart

society6.com/asarstudios

www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop

500px.com/p/asarstudios

ahmet-asar.pixels.com

eastern-accents.pixels.com

artistic-panda.pixels.com

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How do Sorting Algorithms look like? A pixelrow of a photograph is taken and then sorted by colorvalues. Done with processing.

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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/

 

Algorithmic composition. A zoomable version can be found here.

 

Algorithmic worlds

Blog

Generative art piece built with Processing. View the applet at justinlivi.net/dancingsine/

Color quantization, JPEG degradation and channel-swapping in interrupted pixel sorting run on blocks of zigzag-scanned arrays produced this result. It amuses me that the quantization algorithms tend to emphasize edges, including facial features and other details, and so most of the glitching happens in faces and other transitions. Clothing, especially uniform gray suits, presents little detail, and so gets little glitching.

Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.

 

Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?

 

Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!

 

Watch video highlights:

vimeo.com/326245953

 

View more photos:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027

 

Learn about Patter:

adamflorin.work/projects/patter/

 

Learn about Algorithmic Arts:

aaassembly.org

 

#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea

8192 triangles are drawn in 3 dimensional space and used to approximate a source image. An algorithm refines the colors and positions of the vertices until the image converges on the target.

    

Made with Processing (processing.org)

Santa Barbara, California

Participants at the Bodily Algorithms workshop, 4 April 2011, Ian Potter Sculpture Court.

 

Hosted by Tim Schork, Charles Anderson and Gideon Obarzanek.

Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.

 

Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?

 

Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!

 

Watch video highlights:

vimeo.com/326245953

 

View more photos:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027

 

Learn about Patter:

adamflorin.work/projects/patter/

 

Learn about Algorithmic Arts:

aaassembly.org

 

#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea

An early experiment in perfecting the geode algorithm.

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

Gregory Zuckerman

Special Writer, The Wall Street Journal

Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.

 

Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?

 

Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!

 

Watch video highlights:

vimeo.com/326245953

 

View more photos:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027

 

Learn about Patter:

adamflorin.work/projects/patter/

 

Learn about Algorithmic Arts:

aaassembly.org

 

#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea

Helena Nikonole is a new media artist, independent curator and educator living in Moscow. Her field of interests embraces hybrid art, the new aesthetics, the Internet of Things, and Artificial Intelligence. In her works she explores technology’s potential opportunities, but also potential risks and dangers which techno-evangelists and scientists are not able to realize.

 

In this way she also conceived her first ever solo exhibition, titled "Contagious Algorithms", presenting her works that use cracks in the system of IP cameras and the Internet of Things.

 

Using these cracks, Helena Nikonole employs algorithms to generate new meanings and functions of hacked systems, pointing out their shortcomings and revealing how they operate, especially in terms of the amount of data collected by digital devices about their users. These data may be just some digital trash, or maybe have a purpose beyond the usual narrative of the political and marketing manipulation, to us incomprehensible, or perhaps understandable only with the help of divine intervention.

 

Be sure to visit the exhibition which allows algorithms to show a range of their abilities, from reading and interpreting data to generating new meanings in the form of musical compositions and sacred books.

  

EXHIBITED WORKS

 

deus X mchn (media-installation, 2017)

f0rma.suprema (media-installation, 2017 – 2018)

The Other View (media-installation, 2018)

Faces2Voices (Online interactive installation, 2020)

  

More: drugo-more.hr/en/helena-nikonole/

 

Photos: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more

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Algorithmes Sérigraphiques

******************************

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/

 

Whenever I choose Digital Ice and Medium sharpness, the Epson software sometimes blocks the scans (as you can see in the sky)

Pour éclairer ces questions, France Stratégie organise avec l’EHESS et Inria un cycle de débats mensuels Mutations technologiques, mutations sociales. La séance « Algorithmes, libertés et responsabilités », a été introduite par Daniel Le Métayer, directeur de recherche Inria, et Antoinette Rouvroy, chercheuse qualifiée du FNRS au Centre de recherche en information, droit et société (CRIDS), à l’Université de Namur.

En savoir plus :

ow.ly/ZkGOm

 

An early experiment in perfecting the geode algorithm.

Helena Nikonole is a new media artist, independent curator and educator living in Moscow. Her field of interests embraces hybrid art, the new aesthetics, the Internet of Things, and Artificial Intelligence. In her works she explores technology’s potential opportunities, but also potential risks and dangers which techno-evangelists and scientists are not able to realize.

 

In this way she also conceived her first ever solo exhibition, titled "Contagious Algorithms", presenting her works that use cracks in the system of IP cameras and the Internet of Things.

 

Using these cracks, Helena Nikonole employs algorithms to generate new meanings and functions of hacked systems, pointing out their shortcomings and revealing how they operate, especially in terms of the amount of data collected by digital devices about their users. These data may be just some digital trash, or maybe have a purpose beyond the usual narrative of the political and marketing manipulation, to us incomprehensible, or perhaps understandable only with the help of divine intervention.

 

Be sure to visit the exhibition which allows algorithms to show a range of their abilities, from reading and interpreting data to generating new meanings in the form of musical compositions and sacred books.

  

EXHIBITED WORKS

 

deus X mchn (media-installation, 2017)

f0rma.suprema (media-installation, 2017 – 2018)

The Other View (media-installation, 2018)

Faces2Voices (Online interactive installation, 2020)

  

More: drugo-more.hr/en/helena-nikonole/

 

Photos: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more

Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.

 

Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?

 

Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!

 

Watch video highlights:

vimeo.com/326245953

 

View more photos:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027

 

Learn about Patter:

adamflorin.work/projects/patter/

 

Learn about Algorithmic Arts:

aaassembly.org

 

#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea

******************************

Algorithmes Sérigraphiques

******************************

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/

 

Algorithmic tracing with toy caterpillar

olorized 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:

www.asarstudios.com

springsofeden.com

 

Visit my portfolio sites:

celestial-images.pixels.com

www.saatchiart.com/celestialart

society6.com/asarstudios

www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop

500px.com/p/asarstudios

ahmet-asar.pixels.com

eastern-accents.pixels.com

artistic-panda.pixels.com

springsofeden.com

www.etsy.com/people/troygift

www.ebay.com/usr/troygiftshop

 

FOLLOW ME:

twitter.com/asarstudios

instagram.com/asarstudios

www.facebook.com/asarstudios/

www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden

www.pinterest.com/freedomonk

 

An early experiment in perfecting the geode algorithm.

file: test343_0c2

New series, 2024

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.

A bit of a bug led to this pretty interesting sketchbook entry for the day.

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