By Dagmar Carnevale Lavezzoli and Jay Bowles at Crysalis

The History of Digital Art for Crypto Explorers

Jun 17, 2020 Uncategorized

4 years ago

50s: HOW IT ALL STARTED

The Origin of Computer Art

The very beginning of computer art can be traced back to the 1950s. During that period artists were exploring mechanical devices and analogue computers, creating works that paved the way for the development of what the early digital pioneers of the 1960s would generate.

BEN F. LAPOSKY

Ben F. Laposky (1914–2000) was an American artist, mathematician, and draftsman. He is regarded as a precursor of the work carried out by the early digital pioneers who made an impact in the 1960s. In his practice during the early 1950s Laposky used analogue electronic equipment, specifically an oscilloscope as a tool able to modulate electronic waves, which he subsequently photographed in different combinations. He named his images “Oscillons”.

BEN F. LAPOSKY, OSCILLONS 21, 1953, SOURCE: MARKLYKEN.COM © BEN F LAPOSKY, SANFORD MUSEUM [1]

BEN F. LAPOSKY, OSCILLONS 45, 1953, SOURCE: MARKLYKEN.COM © BEN F LAPOSKY, SANFORD MUSEUM [2]

BEN F. LAPOSKY, OSCILLONS 27, 1953, SOURCE: MARKLYKEN.COM © BEN F LAPOSKY, SANFORD MUSEUM [3]

HERBERT W. FRANKE

Herbert W. Franke (b. 1927) is an Austrian physicist, scientist, writer, curator and one of the early pioneers of computer art. During the 1950s he experimented with oscilloscopes and cameras to create patterns of sets of lines. He brought significant contributions to the development of computer art, both artistically and academically.

HERBERT W. FRANKE, LIGHT SHAPES, 1953, SOURCE: ARTSY, PHOTO EDITION BERLIN [4]

HERBERT W. FRANKE, LIGHT SHAPES, 1953, SOURCE: ARTSY, PHOTO EDITION BERLIN [5]

HERBERT W. FRANKE, LIGHT SHAPES,1953, SOURCE: ARTSY, PHOTO EDITION BERLIN [6]

60s–70s: PIONEERS OF COMPUTER ART

Artists Who Made an Impact in the History of Digital Art

The 1960s and 1970s play a significant role in the history of digital art. During that time art started to intersect with technology and artists began experimenting with computers, often in collaboration with engineers. Some of those who left a strong impact in the development of digital art, include Georg Nees, Frieder Nake, Kenneth Knowlton and Leon Harmon, Vera Molnár and Lillian Schwartz.

GEORG NEES

Georg Nees (1926-2016) was a German mathematician and academic. He studied mathematics, physics and philosophy. He was the first person to publicly show art that was generated by a computer – computer art, which is today generally called digital art, generative art and in his specific case we would refer it as algorithmic art.

GEORG NEES, SCHOTTER, COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGE, LITHOGRAPH ON PAPER, 1968-1970. GIVEN BY THE COMPUTER ARTS SOCIETY, SUPPORTED BY SYSTEM SIMULATION LTD, LONDON, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [1]

GEORG NEES, 23-ECKE (POLYGON OF 23 VERTICES), 1964, SOURCE: COMPART [2]

GEORG NEES, SCREENPRINT ON PAPER, MOUNTED ON BOARD, 1970, GIVEN BY THE COMPUTER ARTS SOCIETY, SUPPORTED BY SYSTEM SIMULATION LTD, LONDON, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [3]

FRIEDER NAKE

Frieder Nake (b.1938) is a German mathematician, computer scientist, regarded as one of the pioneers of computer art. In the 1960s he created an algorithm to explore Paul Klee’s use of vertical and horizontal lines. His source of inspiration was Klee’s 1929 painting Highroads and Byroads. Nake’s ultimate goal was not that of creating an exact reproduction of Klee’s artwork. He rather explored ideas about possible algorithmic art forms.

Nake defined the parameters for the computer and the pen plotter to draw […] He then deliberately wrote random variables into the program which allowed the computer to make choices of its own, based on probability theory.

THE VICTORIA & ALBERT MUSEUM

FRIEDER NAKE, HOMMAGE À PAUL KLEE, 13/9/65 NR.2, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [4]

PHOTOGRAPH OF A PLOTTER DRAWING, ‘RANDOM POLYGONS’, BY FRIEDER NAKE, 1964. GIVEN BY THE AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE V&A THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF PATRIC PRINCE, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [5]

FRIEDER NAKE, WALK-THROUGH-RASTER, 1967, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [6]

KEN KNOWLTON AND LEON HARMON

Ken Knowlton (b.1931) is an artist, mosaicist, portraitist and a computer graphics pioneer. He used to work at Bell Labs. Leon Harmon (1922-1983) was a researcher in mental/neural processing. In 1966 Knowlton and Harmon experimented with photomosaic and made the first experiment to scan a photograph into a computer, recreating it with a different range of grey generated by mathematical and electronic symbols. Their famous image of a reclining nude is what Knowlton and Harmon defined as “computer-processed creatures”.

KEN KNOWLTON AND LEON HARMON, COMPUTER NUDE (STUDIES IN PERCEPTION I), 1967, SILKSCREEN PRINT, COLLECTION ALBRIGHT-KNOX ART GALLERY, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, © ESTATE OF LEON HARMON / KEN KNOWLTON [7]

E.A.T

Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) was a collective set up in 1967 in New York to foster collaborations between artists and engineers. This organisation was originally founded by engineers Billy Klüver and Fred Waldhauer, and artists Robert Rauschenberg and Robert Whitman. It gave rise to installations and performances incorporating new technologies.

EXPERIMENTS IN ART AND TECHNOLOGY (E.A.T.), SOURCE: DIGICULT [8]

ALLAN KAPROW

E.A.T served as a source of inspiration for many artists who continued to explore the intersection between art and technology. In 1969 American artist Allan Kaprow (1927-2006) created his famous artistic TV happening, an interactive experience between groups of people and television technologists.

ALAN KAPROW, HELLO, 1969, SOURCE: ECOLOGY OF INTIMACY [9]

DESMOND PAUL HENRY

Desmond Paul Henry (1921-2004) is one of the early British pioneers of computer art in the 1960s. He is renowned for having constructed three mechanical drawing machines from bombsight analogue computers, which were used by fighter pilots during World War II. Henry’s machine-generated effects present complex abstract and curvilinear graphics and are considered early examples of computer graphics.

DESMOND PAUL HENRY, #620, 1962, SOURCE: KATE VASS GALERIES [1]

DESMOND PAUL HENRY, #824, 1963, SOURCE: KATE VASS GALERIES [2]

LILLIAN SCHWARTZ

Lillian Schwartz (b.1927) is an American artist, regarded as a pioneer in computer art. She was a member of the collective Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) in the 1960s and collaborated with engineers on different projects. She brought significant innovations to the field of computer art during the 1960s and 1970s and contributed to the developments of graphics, film, video, 2D/3D animation and special effects.

LILLIAN SCHWARTZ AND KENNETH C. KNOWLTON, PIXILLATION, 1970, SOURCE: DIGITAL ART ARCHIVE, COPYRIGHT © 1970, LILLIAN F. SCHWARTZ AND KENNETH C. KNOWLTON [3]

LILLIAN SCHWARTZ, CHARMS, 1970, SOURCE: ARTSY, MAGENTA PLAINS NEW YORK [4]

PAUL BROWN

Paul Brown (b.1947) is an Anglo-Australian artist, writer and educator who has been focussing on art, science and technology since the 1960s and on computational & generative art since the 1970s. Between 1977 and 1979 he studied at the Slade School of Art in London, one of the few institutions which fully incorporated the use of computers into art during the 1970s. He is an internationally recognised artist.

PAUL BROWN, UNTITLED COMPUTER ASSISTED DRAWING, 1975, PLOTTER DRAWING, GIVEN BY THE AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE V&A THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF PATRIC PRINCE, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [5]

PAUL BROWN, THE LABYRINTH OF THE LAW, ORIGINAL GRATE VISUALISATION DIGITAL IMAGE, SOURCE: PAUL-BROWN.COM, COPYRIGHT © PAUL BROWN [6]

VERA MOLNÁR

Vera Molnár (b. 1924) is a French artist of Hungarian origin. She is regarded as one of the pioneers of computer and algorithmic arts. In the 1960s she started creating algorithmic paintings with simple geometrical forms and co-founded the group “Art et Informatique” in 1967, investigating the intersection between art and computing. As explained in “Digital Art: Painting with Pixels” by Ron Miller, Vera Molnár believed that:

Without the aid of a computer, it would not be possible to materialize quite so faithfully an image that previously existed only in the artist’s mind. This may sound paradoxical, but the machine, which is thought to be cold and inhuman, can help to realize what is most subjective, unattainable, and profound in a human being.

VERA MOLNÁR

VERA MOLNÁR, A LA RECHERCHE DE PAUL KLEE, 1970, INK ON PAPER, COLLECTION FRANC BRETAGNE, COPYRIGHT © ADAGP, PARIS, CREDIT PHOTO HERVÉ BEUREL [7]

VERA MOLNÁR, INTERRUPTIONS, 1968/69, SOURCE: ARTNOME, COPYRIGHT © VERA MOLNÁR [8]

ROBERT W. MALLARY

Robert W. Mallary (1917-1997) was an American artist, renowned mostly for his Neo-Dada, “junk art” sculptures, which he created from different materials and urban rubbish during the 1950s and 1960s. He is also remembered for his major contributions to computer art and for having created one of the first sculptures generated by computer in 1968.

ROBERT W. MALLARY, QUAD 1, COMPUTER-DESIGNED SCULPTURE, 1968, SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA, COPYRIGHT © ROBERT MALLARY – ESTATE OF ROBERT MALLARY [9]

ROBERT W. MALLARY, 3 COLOUR PLOTTER GRAPHIC, 1972, COMPUTER DRAWING, SOURCE: TELEGRAPH [10]

MANFRED MOHR

Manfred Mohr (b. 1938) is a German artist regarded as one of the pioneers of digital art. Initially an action painter and a jazz saxophonist, he turned to computer art in the late 1960s. He transposed the rhythm, energy and sense of improvisation gained from making music to creating algorithmic art. He has been based in New York since 1981.

MANFRED MOHR, P-055. RANDOM CIRCUIT, 1970, COMPUTER-GENERATED DRAWING, SOURCE: ZKM | CENTER FOR ART AND MEDIA © MANFRED MOHR; PHOTO © ZKM | CENTER FOR ART AND MEDIA, PHOTO: FRANZ J. WAMHOF [11]

MANFRED MOHR, CUBIC LIMIT, 1973–1974, DIGITAL TRANSFER OF 16MM FILM, SOURCE: ARTSY, BITFORMS GALLERY NEW YORK, LOS ANGELES, SAN FRANCISCO [12]

80s–90s: DIGITAL ART

Harold Cohen, Andy Warhol and other Representative Artists

During the 1980s digital technologies were no longer associated mostly with engineers – they became part of everyday life. Computers started to spread outside of scientific laboratories and they became employed both for business and personal use. While not a comprehensive list of artists, this post highlights some the main artists who brought significant contributions during the 80s and 90s.

HAROLD COHEN

Harold Cohen (1928-2016) was a British-born artist, renowned for having created AARON, a complex computer software program to generate art autonomously. Cohen’s work combined artificial intelligence with art. His major contributions in the field of digital art led his work to be displayed in many museums exhibitions, such as the Tate Gallery in London. Besides his interest in new technologies, Cohen was also a painter.

HAROLD COHEN, ATHLETE SERIES, 1986, SOURCE: MEDIUM, NYTIMES [1]

HAROLD COHEN, “LW3”, 1987, HAND-COLORED COMPUTER-GENERATED DRAWING. SOURCE: NYTIMES [2]

ANDY WARHOL

Andy Warhol (1928-1987) created a series of digital works on a personal computer, the Amiga 1000 model, in the middle of the 1980s. These works were made by the pop artist as part of a collaborative project with Commodore Amiga and had been left on Amiga floppy disks for nearly 20 years before they got found and recovered by the Andy Warhol Museum. The digital images included doodles and revisitations of Warhol’s existing artworks, such as the acclaimed Campbell’s soup can, and Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus.

If I had a good computer I could catch up with my thoughts over the weekend if I ever got behind myself. A computer would be a very qualified boss.

ANDY WARHOL, THE PHILOSOPHY OF ANDY WARHOL, 1975

ANDY WARHOL, ANDY2, 1985, SOURCE: DESIGNBOOM, © THE ANDY WARHOL FOUNDATION FOR THE VISUALS ARTS, INC. / COURTESY OF THE ANDY WARHOL MUSEUM [3]

ANDY WARHOL, VENUS, 1985, SOURCE: DESIGNBOOM, © THE ANDY WARHOL FOUNDATION FOR THE VISUALS ARTS, INC. / COURTESY OF THE ANDY WARHOL MUSEUM [4]

KENNETH SNELSON

Kenneth Snelson (1927-2016) was an American sculptor and photographer, who also gave contributions to the development of digital art. He is renowned as the Father of Tensegrity, described by the artist as “solid elements set in space and supporting each other through tension”.

His famous image “Forest Devils’ MoonNight” was created with a 3D computer animation program and was part of the artist’ exploration into computer imagery.

KENNETH SNELSON, FOREST DEVILS’ MOON NIGHT, 1991, C-TYPE PRINT, GIVEN BY THE AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE V&A THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF PATRIC PRINCE, COPYRIGHT © VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON [5]

PETER STRUYCKEN

Peter Struycken (b.1939) is a versatile artist from the Netherlands, regarded as one of the pioneers in the field of digital art in his country. He is mostly renowned for having created the digital portrait of Queen Beatrix used for Dutch postage stamps. The image was made of digital-shifted dots, evoking a sort of “digital pointillism”.

PETER STRUYCKEN AND GERARD UNGER, THE BEATRIX STAMP SERIES, 1981–2010, SOURCE: FLICKR, © FLORIAN HARDWIG [6]

JAMES FAURE WALKER

James Faure Walker (b. 1949) is a British artist whose repertoire encompasses oil painting, watercolour and digital art. Since the end of the 1980s, he has been incorporating computer generated images into his painting, blending the diverse features of the digital and the physical paint to the extent that it’s often hard to discern which one is which.

JAMES FAURE WALKER, DROP, 1993, COMPOSITE INKJET PRINT, SOURCE: JAMESFAUREWALKER.COM, © JAMES FAURE WALKER [7]

JAMES FAURE WALKER, PROPOSITION IV MONOPOLY 1991, COMPOSITE INKJET PRINT, SOURCE: JAMESFAUREWALKER.COM, © JAMES FAURE WALKER [8]

*This article is for non-profit educational purposes. We do not represent or work with any of the featured artists. The copyright of all images belong to their authors. We aim to contribute to the research in the field of digital art and hope our readers will find this article beneficial to their learning.

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