"A Box of Chaos: The Generative Artist's Toolkit" by Benjamin Kovach

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  • Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
  • Every artist has their tools - paint, pens, canvases, or film - that they use on a daily basis. Have you ever wondered what a generative artist's box of tools looks like? What algorithms do we use? How do we deal with color? How do we make code-generated artwork appear natural?
    In this talk, we will reach our hands into the toolkit of a generative artist together and discuss what we find inside. We'll touch on a variety of simple techniques that you can utilize and combine to produce interesting works of art, today!
    Speaker: Benjamin Kovach
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 14

  • @vince-1337
    @vince-1337 3 роки тому +18

    As a professional digital artist, generative art looks like a neat add for some crazy shapes and lines. Just need to learn to code 😛! Thanx a lot Ben!

  • @mbbostanci
    @mbbostanci 2 роки тому +7

    i actually do have interactive work that generate patterns according to live spectator data! congrats on the good talk, and very attractive outputs👍

  • @felixdietzCGN
    @felixdietzCGN 5 років тому +6

    I really like your Art, Benjamin 👍 Also, interesting talk!

  • @beagle989
    @beagle989 Рік тому +2

    when you said "I write haskell", I was the least surprised, and I mean that in the nicest way

  • @niyagentleman8143
    @niyagentleman8143 Рік тому

    thx ..amazing explanations ^^ suming up very well the subject!

  • @anthonybet
    @anthonybet 4 роки тому +7

    this thing about colors, thank you!!

    • @mosonic
      @mosonic 2 роки тому

      Yeah, I thought exactly the same. So helpful!

  • @5up5up
    @5up5up 4 роки тому +2

    love it

  • @eduardotobarjaque7758
    @eduardotobarjaque7758 2 роки тому

    Excelent talk

  • @mijkedevink1232
    @mijkedevink1232 2 роки тому

    hi, liked this! it's Piet Mondriaan with dubble aa btw

  • @bendunselman
    @bendunselman 7 місяців тому

    At 4:59 the concept of 'edge', hard, soft, lost edges, is missing. And if you like yoh could also include 'motion'.

  • @laurencegoldman4639
    @laurencegoldman4639 3 роки тому +5

    Problem is: how to get generative computer art to do what the Kandinsky does? There is hierarchical organization in the Kandinsky where every element relates to it’s neighbors and at the same builds a whole structure. Everything is perfectly placed. In fact the placement is composing ( a verb), not choosing the best looking frame. I bring this up, not because I wish to diss your work, but to raise a problem: the traditional analog art done by a master gets better the longer you look at it, the computer image dies quickly, unless it constantly evolves as a non-repeating animation (like a great screen saver). Believe me, I want the computer image to hold up over time. Now it’s basically a novel texture.

    • @MisterYoupinet
      @MisterYoupinet 3 роки тому +4

      Personnally, the more I look a work by a master, the less I like it.
      let's see. I'm not sure people would do difference in blind test. Even if the Blind test was during ten years.

    • @manuebg3685
      @manuebg3685 2 роки тому +1

      Not sure if I get u right. But you could create sets of rules (color graphs or composition sketches or whatever) and let randomness work inside you're defined ruleset. So you get a "perfect" picture every frame