You Can’t Know my Mind: A Festival of Computational Creativity

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Reference

Simon Colton and Dan Ventura: You Can’t Know my Mind: A Festival of Computational Creativity. In: Computational Creativity 2014 ICCC 2014, 351-354.

DOI

Abstract

We report on a week-long celebration of Computational Cre- ativity research and practice in a gallery in Paris, France. The festival was called You Can’t Know my Mind, and was in- tended to introduce to the public the idea that researchers such as ourselves are writing software to be surprisingly un- predictable and creative in nature. The festival included a tra- ditional art exhibition with a vernissage, a live music evening, a poetry night coupled with a food tasting, and a week long demonstration of mood-driven portraiture from The Painting Fool software. Each of the events – which are described here for the first time – involved an element of creative respon- sibility taken on by various software systems. The success of the festival was demonstrated in terms of attendance and feedback, pieces written by journalists, and follow up events which have taken place in 2013 and 2014.

Extended Abstract

Bibtex

@inproceedings{
author = {Simon Colton and Dan Ventura},
title = {You Can’t Know my Mind: A Festival of Computational Creativity},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Computational Creativity},
series = {ICCC2014},
year = {2014},
month = {Jun},
location = {Ljubljana, Slovenia},
pages = {351-354},
url = {http://computationalcreativity.net/iccc2014/wp-content/uploads/2014/06//15.8_Colton.pdf, http://de.evo-art.org/index.php?title=You_Can’t_Know_my_Mind:_A_Festival_of_Computational_Creativity },
publisher = {International Association for Computational Creativity},
keywords = {computational, creativity},
}

Used References

[Colton and P ́erez-Ferrer 2012] Colton, S., and P ́erez-Ferrer, B. 2012. No photos harmed/growing paths from seed – an exhibition. In Proc. of NPAR.

[Colton et al. 2014] Colton, S.; Cook, M.; Hepworth, R.; and Pease, A. 2014. On acid drops and teardrops: Observer issues in Computational Creativity. In Proc. of the AISB symposium on AI and Philosophy.

[Colton, Goodwin, and Veale 2012] Colton, S.; Goodwin, J.; and Veale, T. 2012. Full-Face poetry generation. In Proc. of the 3rd Int. Conference on Computational Creativity.

[Colton 2012] Colton, S. 2012. The Painting Fool: Stories from building an automated painter. In McCormack, J., and d’Inverno, M., eds., Computers and Creativity. Springer.

[Morris et al. 2012] Morris, R.; Burton, S.; Bodily, P.; and Ventura, D. 2012. Soup over bean of pure joy: Culinary ruminations of an artificial chef. In Proc. of the 3rd Interna- tional Conference on Computational Creativity.

[Norton, Heath, and Ventura 2013] Norton, D.; Heath, D.; and Ventura, D. 2013. Finding creativity in an artificial artist. Journal of Creative Behavior 47(2):106-124.


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Full Text

http://computationalcreativity.net/iccc2014/wp-content/uploads/2014/06//15.8_Colton.pdf

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