Thanks to ART214, I now know how to (sort of) use illustrator! I had the opportunity to put my new illustrator skills to use by designing a logo for my EVE Online alliance. \o/
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Artist Post: Harold Cohen
This artist was selected from the Paul Herz reading.
Harold Cohen (b. 1928) is an English-born painter and programmer. He graduated from the University of London with a Diploma in Fine Arts in 1951 and has since then gone on to teach in a variety of academic positions. He has also displayed his art in a huge number of exhibitions, written many essays, presented many lectures, and published 4 books.
Cohen is known for being the creator of AARON, a computer program capable of physically controlling a pen and creating line drawings. These drawings follow specific algorithms that mimic the cognitive aspects of drawing and can output either abstract art or representational art, including figures such as plants and people. AARON is not capable of self learning and all of the themes and figures, called 'styles,' are manually written by Cohen before being added into the code. He started working on AARON in 1973, while he was a visiting scholar at Stanford University. In 1995 Cohen expanded on his software, enabling AARON to color the images that it had created. (Previously he would take generated line drawings and color/paint them manually.) AARON can now also create entirely digital images. To this date he is still modifying AARON's code and generating new images every year.
As of late (the past few years) Cohen/AARON's art has taken a distinctively abstract, floral turn. While the human figures in tropical/beach scenes are probably his most classic works, I find his new art to also be very interesting. The colors are pleasing to look at and although there are lines and squiggles going all over the place, there is a method to the madness that shines through. Cohen's work bridges the fields of art, computer programming, and cognitive science with creations (created by a creation) that are highly technical and symbolic, but can still be appreciated at the visual level.
Visit Harold Cohen's site here.
Harold Cohen (b. 1928) is an English-born painter and programmer. He graduated from the University of London with a Diploma in Fine Arts in 1951 and has since then gone on to teach in a variety of academic positions. He has also displayed his art in a huge number of exhibitions, written many essays, presented many lectures, and published 4 books.
Cohen is known for being the creator of AARON, a computer program capable of physically controlling a pen and creating line drawings. These drawings follow specific algorithms that mimic the cognitive aspects of drawing and can output either abstract art or representational art, including figures such as plants and people. AARON is not capable of self learning and all of the themes and figures, called 'styles,' are manually written by Cohen before being added into the code. He started working on AARON in 1973, while he was a visiting scholar at Stanford University. In 1995 Cohen expanded on his software, enabling AARON to color the images that it had created. (Previously he would take generated line drawings and color/paint them manually.) AARON can now also create entirely digital images. To this date he is still modifying AARON's code and generating new images every year.
As of late (the past few years) Cohen/AARON's art has taken a distinctively abstract, floral turn. While the human figures in tropical/beach scenes are probably his most classic works, I find his new art to also be very interesting. The colors are pleasing to look at and although there are lines and squiggles going all over the place, there is a method to the madness that shines through. Cohen's work bridges the fields of art, computer programming, and cognitive science with creations (created by a creation) that are highly technical and symbolic, but can still be appreciated at the visual level.
Visit Harold Cohen's site here.
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Project 2 Progress
I started with this portrait but over the weekend I got a family member to help take a photo, so now I'm doing a self-portrait instead. I like the progress I had already made on the initial portrait though, so I will post it here as well.
I would prefer not to post my original photo online for personal reasons. This is what I have of the vector so far, though. The green blob in my (currently missing) hand is my pet parrot. Illustrator is a very foreign and confusing program to me. My brush tool is not working (I'm sure there is some reason why) so I am only able to create shapes with the pen and pencil tools.
Music Art
I went with a creepy tropical tribal theme. Rather than focusing on the structure of the music, I attempted to express the vibe I was getting from the music.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Portraits
Portraits from deviantArt.
http://fav.me/d361ri2
http://fav.me/d4evxvx
http://fav.me/d4bo909
http://fav.me/d5gjz6d
http://fav.me/d5gjutp
http://fav.me/d5gllry
http://fav.me/d2jbtxx
bonus: this is actually a photo of a doll, but I thought the hair and angle looked very neat.
http://fav.me/d361ri2
http://fav.me/d4evxvx
http://fav.me/d4bo909
http://fav.me/d5gjz6d
http://fav.me/d5gjutp
http://fav.me/d5gllry
http://fav.me/d2jbtxx
bonus: this is actually a photo of a doll, but I thought the hair and angle looked very neat.
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