Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts

11.1.12

ART AND THE COMPUTER - MELVIN L. PRUEITT

All the following images are taken from Melvin L. Prueitt's book Art and the Computer.


The human visual system integrates line segments into subjectively perceived surfaces. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)


Richard F. Voss used fractal geometry to produce a very realistic scene. (1982 Benoit B. Mandelbrot, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center)


"Artic Twilight." Experimenting around with an erosion program. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)


"Concession to Scifi." There are number of ways to create abstract art with a computer. (1980 Darcy Gerbarg)


"Vanishing Essence." The reason that these plates are effective in producing a pleasant picture is that our visual systems are able to connect them together into unified curving surfaces. (1983 Melvin L. Prueitt)


Vibeke Sorenson's computer graphics design class in the Department of Communication Arts and Design at the Virginia Commonwealth University found that home computers could produce colorful patterns.


This was produced by James Squires as a graduate student using a Chromatics 7900 in the Fine Arts Department of UCLA.


"Rainbow Valley." The stripes in the rainbow actually consist of bent tubes. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)

4.1.12

KO NAKAJIMA

Ko Nakajima is one of the pioneer Japanese artists of video art. After beginnings in animation video, he made use of new technologies to appropriate and develop different softwares that allowed him to create veritable visual collages in movement. Each work is the expression of a unified research, progressively unveiled in the process of discovery of a life’s oeuvre.
Mount Fuji dates from the year 1984, at a time when Nakajima had already affirmed his style of manipulating images, and had established his universe distinguished by elements of nature and infused with Oriental philosophy. This tape is emblematic of the researches he conducted thanks to the invention of the aniputer, a machine which allows one to distort, superpose and embed images with ease, created in collaboration with JVC’s research department. Against the rhythm of repetitive music, different images of Mount Fuji compose geometric structures forming a Rubik’s cube’s perspectival frame, cut through by photographs which regularly come and drift away before the spectator.
Mount Fuji is a highly mystical site in Japanese culture, a religious and national symbol. It is at the heart of numerous works, placing man in relation to a mountain’s ancientness and its fundamental ambiguity – the possibility of a volcanic eruption dwells within the impression of stability and permanence. Playing with static and flat images that cut across the screen, Nakajima brings to mind the tectonic drift of plates which could at any time erase the benign image of Mount Fuji.
http://www.newmedia-arts.be/cgi-bin/show-oeu.asp?ID=150000000034495&lg=GBR

17.1.11

Лунная радуга

Lunnaya Raduga, directed by Andrei Yermash and V. Karpichhyov, 1984
Music by Eduard Artemyev...
Where can we find this film?

16.1.11

THE COMPUTER CHRONICLES

A review of computer art, graphics capabilities of computers and professional computer graphics systems. Episode year: 1984


http://www.archive.org/details/computerchronicles

27.11.10

VIRTUAL GALLERY

By Lillian Schwartz. From her book The Computer Artist's Handbook, 1992


(Accepted version of the MOMA poster, 1984)


(Dance of Matisse and Modigliani's Nude Observed by Me, 1985)


(MOMA Gallery 1, 1983)


(MOMA project images, 1982-83)

28.3.10