art – sardonick http://motespace.com/blog Disclaimer: The following web space does not contain my own opinions, merely linguistic representations thereof. Fri, 14 Oct 2011 16:26:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.6.1 Impressionism http://motespace.com/blog/2011/02/20/impressionism/ Mon, 21 Feb 2011 02:24:37 +0000 http://motespace.com/blog/?p=331 Spent a lazy Sunday afternoon at the Getty, mostly looking at a handful of Monets.

Aside from being beautiful, they’re amazing glimpses into visual processing into the human brain. Impressionism is, at its core, lossy compression, right?

(To digress a bit, I look at Impressionism as a reaction against photography, which says to itself “Look, this camera can capture direct reality far better than I ever could. So what is my role as a painter and artist, now? My brush can never get the colors quite right, the perspective and angle quite perfect. Where is my niche, that I am not obsolete?”.

So, impressionism says “my rough strokes can capture the spirit of reality better than the overt literal capture of a camera & lens”.)

So, impressionism is lossy compression, like a too-small .jpg (or, perhaps more accurately, one of those 8-bit tribute albums. It throws away information while still attempting to retain the overall picture. But the information it chooses to throw out seems to imply a wonderful exploitation of the human visual perception system.


Sporadic dashes of green become ship masts, stacatto jabs of orange the sun, vague blotches of purple become the fog. But not, not overtly.

(Classic computer vision & object recognition approaches would certainly work quite poorly on paintings like these. I’d be halfway curious to try to design a system that could do it well).

I wonder what it was like for the first folks exploring this technique. Especially because, standing so close to the canvas, it’s easy to see the literal but hard to get the gestalt.

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Magritte Thoughts http://motespace.com/blog/2007/03/03/magritte-thoughts/ Sun, 04 Mar 2007 05:49:38 +0000 http://fairuz.isi.edu/blog/index.php/2007/03/03/magritte-thoughts/ Went to see the Magritte exhibit at LACMA today. Thoughts:

  • I’d never thought of the parallels between The Red Model and cyborgs/cybernetic enhancement before =).
  • Likewise, I stared at The Human Condition for a good 20 minutes, and couldn’t help but thinking about AI agents and World Models
  • Everything in the Treachery of Images section made me really appreciate the classes I’ve taken on semiotics/semantics. If I ever teach a linguistics course, I’d like to spend a class day looking at Magritte paintings, discussing the relationship between label, portrayal, and thing, and their respective roles in communication.
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Monet’s Lilies Shuddering http://motespace.com/blog/2006/04/21/monets-lilies-shuddering/ Fri, 21 Apr 2006 21:34:44 +0000 http://fairuz.isi.edu/blog/index.php/archives/2006/04/21/monets-lilies-shuddering/
Monet never knew
              he was painting his "Lilies" for
      a lady from the Chicago Art Institute
          who went to France and filmed
              today's lilies
              by the "Bridge at Giverny"
                  a leaf afloat among them
      the film of which now flickers
          at the entrance to his framed visions
              with a Debussy piano soundtrack
flooding with a new fluorescence (fleur-essence?)
      the rooms and rooms
              of waterlilies

Monet caught a Cloud in a Pond
               in 1903
      and got a first glimpse
                      of its lilies and for twenty years returned
      again and again to paint them
          which now gives us the impression
              that he floated thru life on them
                              and their reflections
          which he also didn�t know
              we would also have occasion
                          to reflect upon
Anymore than he could know
          that John Cage would be playing a
              "Cello with Melody-driven Electronics"
                      tonight at the University of Chicago
And making those Lilies shudder and shed
                                  black light

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, 1950s

The thing I like most about this poem is the underlying conflict between expressionism/impressionism, but how that’s totally unnecessary to aesthetically enjoying the poem. Irony?

(aside: Poetry sucks in html. This is the best fix I could find. My apologies.)

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Information, Knowledge as Art http://motespace.com/blog/2005/11/28/information-as-art/ Mon, 28 Nov 2005 22:02:27 +0000 http://fairuz.isi.edu/blog/index.php/archives/2005/11/28/information-as-art/ Came across Newsmap this afternoon, a google maps mashup by Ben O’Neill today that plots locations mentioned in BBC news on a map of the world.

The implementation was neat, but I can’t help but dream of what this could be like. Imagine a map of the world (perhaps OLED, mounted on your wall), with regional coloring based on density of news events in that area. You’d need a few hacks to make things look nice (normalization for standard-level-of-news per area (different areas of the world have different minimum levels of media coverage) … smoothing so that local news-concentration influences regional news-concentration). And a gradient would do a lot more for visualization than these discrete news-event-bubbles (but I realize that the google maps api limits you to location bubble markers, and remixers are limitted to the tools at hand).

I love to see non-art becoming art. To this day, one of my favorite random conversations was with Tom and danah at a conference a year or so ago, where we discussed a fellow information addict who had covered all the walls of his house with bookshelfs full of books. Information, knowledge became art–and it evolved so both organically and unobtrusively.

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Artwork Remixing http://motespace.com/blog/2005/02/03/artwork-remixing/ Thu, 03 Feb 2005 20:27:43 +0000 http://fairuz.isi.edu/blog/index.php/archives/2005/02/03/artwork-remixing/ Johannes at MonoChrom has an amazing project going on right now. He’s taken four old black-and-white drawings of chainsaw and wood, and invited netizens to use them as inspiration/illustration for graphical novel shorts.

His replies have been amazing, especially in their spread of subject matter.
Ranging from introspective

to psychotic

to (probably my favorite, by Doctorow), futuristic.

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