View allAll Photos Tagged generative

Generative pattern

virus attack!

Another generative birthday card. Made with a variant of a port of Mister Doob's Harmony drawing toy.

I saw a Georg Nees print in a pdf of an exhibition catalog of a show called Computer Art held at the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi in 1972. I thought to make a similar print with Processing, but then I did something slightly different.

generative portrait - collage

Generative pattern

Generative art made with Adobe Flash. High resolution available for Giclée print.

20x20 grid with squares in various states of fractalization.

 

Made with processing.org.

As one moves, and throws some shapes, the image builds. Moving more quickly makes busier images. I had so much fun doing this.

These are the first results of a new generative art engine. They are just test-renders testing the basic algorithm. I need to add more control over where the rectangles are split, control the color and blendmodes... so I can actually create some artworks (these are just random).

 

generative portraits - collage

First results of a new generative art algorithm. Still experimenting with it (as always).

This is generated by letting 2000+ particles wander around, leaving a trail. They flock together based on a perlin noise map.

See my albums list for some of my best work: www.flickr.com/photos/200044612@N04/albums/

 

See my main account for my photography, videos, fractal images and more here: www.flickr.com/photos/josh-rokman/

 

Made with Image Creator from Microsoft Designer, formerly known as the Bing Image Creator. Powered by DALL·E 3.

 

I think that AI image generation is similar in many ways to photography. The camera itself handles all the fine details, but the photographer is in charge of curating the types of images that will be created.

 

Ultimately, it is all about maximizing the probability that something good will be created.

 

This is very similar to AI image generation, in terms of the skills involved and what the human does vs. what the machine does.

 

You can't compare AI image generation to the process of actually making these images from scratch with 3D software or paint/pencils, where the human controls every detail.

 

However, I think the process really is very similar to that of photography, as I made the case for above. I think that DALL-E 3 is by far the most powerful AI image generation tool currently available.

 

- Josh

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