In 1968, the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London mounted “Cybernetic Serendipity,” the first major exhibition of cybernetic art—that is, art made with machines and computers, in particular. The ...
Think of Ivan Moscovich’s harmonograms as the work of a Spirograph toy on an acid trip – elegantly swirling, myriad-coloured ink pens driven by the gravity and precision mathematics of a Heath ...
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The subject of this piece is computer art, and I wish I could say nothing but nasty things about it. The impulse is almost irresistible to put down cybernetic art as so much mathematical doodling, ...
After watching this, I tend to think artist Sanela Jahic must have gone, “How can I create a masterpiece and look like an X-Man?” Fire Painting, the resulting project, makes art out of cybernetics, an ...
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