Sunday, October 28, 2018

Will the Robots not just be our masters, but eventually our "Old Masters" as well?

Portrait of Edmond Belamy, 2018, created by GAN (Generative Adversarial Network), sold by Christie’s for $432,500. Image © Obvious (via ArtfixDaily.com)



We have always heard comments about modern and contemporary art (usually abstract) along the lines of "my kid could do that", and we have seen paintings by elephants and monkeys. Now the computer has entered the picture, and a huge price was obtained for a painting generated via computer artificial intelligence.

In this article, "Is artificial intelligence set to become art’s next medium?" a work created by computer algorithm sold for 432,500.



There are many aspects of life and work where computers and robotics are not only helpful, but can actually do a better job than humans. Will this means of producing art be one of them? While the visual appeal and technical qualities are undeniable, there is one significant difference as far as I am concerned.

A 2015 paper :Quantifying Creativity in Art Networks by Ahmed Elgammalyand Babak Salehz from the Art and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at Rutgers discussed whether artificial intelligence could evaluate the creativity of artworks. Their conclusion, in short, was yes, it could. I wonder if they have plans to now study the computer generated art for creativity. We could now have computers both creating and critiquing works of art!


Over time, our relationship to art changes, as do fashions and trends in art. But I think there is one constant we can rely on (at least for now, I hope):


While computers can "create" art, unlike humans, they don't have a need to create art.





Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Banksy Artwork Self Destructs



You have probably seen the news about the Banksy artwork that "self-destructed" immediately after it sold for over one million dollars at auction (If you haven't, you can read more here).


Image via Casterline Goodman Gallery / Instagram 

 
If you are not familiar with Banksy, he is an artist known for his art on walls, which often incorporates images or features of the surface to make political, satirical, or sometimes simply interesting commentary.

He chooses to remain anonymous (although this seems to be more difficult as time passes, and various outlets believe they have outed him).

Is it art? Theater? A publicity stunt? My opinion: A combination of the three.

The auction gallery claims they did not know about this in advance (a rather dubious claim), and now the discussion is whether the art's value has been harmed or escalated as the result of this shredding.

Thoughts? Is this a serious commentary on art and commerce, or simply more fodder for the "contemporary art is a bunch of idiots" crowd?











Monday, February 12, 2018

Georgia O'Keeffe - a Pioneer Artist and Brand Manager

Georgia O'Keeffe: Art, Image, Style  is an exhibit at the Peabody Essex Museum this winter showing two aspects of Georgia O'Keeffe - her art, and her wardrobe.



Tony Vaccaro, Georgia O’Keeffe with “Pelvis Series, Red with Yellow”
and the desert, 1960. Georgia O’Keeffe Museum.
Courtesy of Tony Vaccaro studio





I had reservations about this exhibit before I went to see it - it seemed like a tenuous connection and would be like snooping through her closets just out of curiosity. But the clothing was another extension of her personality and her artistic sensibility.

More importantly, it demonstrated how she would still fit in with today's world - it was part of her personal branding. She not only kept a consistent image, in keeping with her theories of art, but she would make sure that published images of her would always have the same visual impression. Think of Steve Jobs and how he always wore impeccably tailored black shirts in keeping with the design philosophy of Apple products.

According to Curator Austen Barron Bailly: "Every aspect of her life was consciously, aesthetically driven — from the clothes she wore, to the way she addressed a letter, to the objects she placed on her mantle, and, of course, to the compositions of her paintings"


If you get a chance, see this exhibit, and gain a new appreciation for the woman and her art. On view through April 1 at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem (www.pem.org) https://www.pem.org/

Your instructor doesn't have quite the style sense O'Keeffe had.