WORKS PAINTED BY MACHINES

(23/10/2022)


Conférence dans le cadre des Congrès scientifiques mondiaux TimeWorld : TimeWorld expose et anime la connaissance sous toutes ses formes, théorique, appliquée et prospective. TimeWorld propose un état de l'art sur une thématique majeure, avec une approche multiculturelle et interdisciplinaire. C'est l'opportunité de rencontres entre chercheurs, industriels, universitaires, artistes et grand public pour faire émerger des idées en science et construire de nouveaux projets.
https://timeworldevent.com/fr/

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Nicole De Brabandere (PhD, University of Arts, Linz) is an associate researcher at McGill University, Canada, and collaborator member at Hexagram. She is the editor of the forthcoming volume: Media, Practice and Theory: tracking emergent thresholds of experience, a collection of 10 chapters around concepts and practices of corporeality, articulation, and media, to be published by Vernon Press in spring, 2022. De Brabandere’s PhD thesis was awarded the “Research Excellence Award” by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Research, an award which is given to the forty top doctoral dissertations in all of Austria, from all disciplines. De Brabandere has published numerous peer-reviewed articles on topics such as affect, creative practice, collaboration and media studies, and has presented talks, workshops and exhibitions in these topics at public and private venues internationally. In 2021 De Brabandere presented the short paper “Machine-Generated Portraits as Impersonal Gestures” for the International Symposium on Electronic Art (ISEA): Why Sentience? in 2021. The findings presented in this talk will be published in the experimental text “Co-composing the Perceptible across Affective, Painterly and Computational Generativities” for the special issue: Algo-rhythms, Kunstlicht Journal, Amsterdam, spring 2022.

Conference : Does painting machine-generated images open a spacetime of corporeal co-composition between humans and machines?

Friday 6 may 2022, 16h - 16h45 — Amphi orange

This talk presents findings detailing the emergent perceptibility of images created by the Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) of the website ThisPersonDoesNotExist.com. The machine-generated images sometimes achieve the photographic likeness of a person, but also make visible computational patterns that propose alternate organizations of form and ground, surface and substance, materiality and immateriality. What’s more, images that initially appear to be objects signifying the real, upon close examination, have no single referential origin but are rather organized in strange configurations that traverse the photographic and computational. Through the careful study afforded by the process of painting these images, the appearance of referential figuration belies alternate generativities, where, for example, the appearance of depth-of-field or over-exposure is revealed as the substance of hair or cloth. While GAN renderings are generated in milliseconds, painting them offers an expanded temporality with which to engage their heterogeneous and transversal constitution. This in turn reconfigures the sense of facticity (and corresponding affects pitting subjects against objects) conjured by the photographic instant. The findings presented in this talk thus signal openings to engage and develop a felt sense of co-composition with the machine-generated image that traverses the human and machine.


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