Representation and Mimesis in Generative Art: Creating Fifty Sisters

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Reference

Jon McCormack: Representation and Mimesis in Generative Art: Creating Fifty Sisters. In: Proceedings of xCoAx 2013, Bergamo, Italy 27-28 June 2013, pp. 71-79

DOI

Abstract

Fifty Sisters is a generative artwork commissioned for the Ars Electronica Museum in Linz. The work consists of fifty 1m x 1m images of computer-synthesized plant-forms, algorithmically ‘grown’ from computer code using artificial evolution and generative grammars. Each plant-like form is derived from the primitive graphic elements of oil company logos.

The title of the work refers to the original ‘Seven Sisters’ — a cartel of seven oil companies that dominated the global petrochemical industry and Middle East oil production from the mid–1940s until the oil crisis of the 1970s.

In this paper I discuss the issue of representation in generative art and how dialogues in mimesis inform the production of a generative artwork, using Fifty Sisters as an example. I also provide information on how these concepts translate into the technical and how issues of representation necessarily pervade all computer-based generative art.

Extended Abstract

Bibtex

Used References

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McCormack, J. Aesthetic Evolution of L-systems Revisited. Applications of Evolutionary Computing (EvoWorkshops 2004). G. R. Raidl, S. Cagnnoni, J. Brankeet al. Berlin, Heidelberg, Springer-Verlag. LNCS 3005: 477–488. 2004.

McCormack, J. A Developmental Model for Generative Media. Advances in Artificial Life (8th European Conference, ECAL 2005). M. Capcarrere, A. A. Freitas, P. J. Bentley, C. G. Johnson and J. Timmis (eds). Berlin; Heidelberg, Springer-Verlag. LNAI 3630: 88–97. 2005.

McCormack, J., O. Bown, A. Dorin, J. McCabe, G. Monro and M. Whitelaw. Ten Questions Concerning Generative Computer Art. Leonardo (to appear, accepted July 2012).[preprint available at: http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jonmc/research/ Papers/TenQuestionsLJ-Preprint.pdf] 2012.

McCormack, J. and A. Dorin. Art, Emergence and the Computational Sublime. Second Iteration: a conference on generative systems in the electronic arts, Melbourne, Australia, CEMA. 2001.

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Links

Full Text

http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jonmc/research/Papers/xcoax2013-mccormack.pdf

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