Prophetic Art, ChatGPT Inside and Out, and The History of Shadows
#060 - Creative Coding / Generative Arts Weekly
The nature of yearning is urgent so as to guarantee evolution, change. -Darryl Calkins
“We are the knights of a future realm.”
I’ve been wading through the libraries of the mind trying to grapple with the relationship between art and its prophetic nature. There appears to be a correlation that art has a predilection for predicting the future of culture. It also tends to have a gravitational pull on innovation.
Think about science fiction in the last 100 years; it’s pretty impressive how the imagination has created some of the future.
Some examples that come to mind (If I remember right, there is a point in the book How Innovation Works by Matt Ridley. He had similar examples to make other points.)
Flip phones: Used in Star Trek in 1966
Autonomous cars: Issac Asimov about self-driving cars back in 1964
Drones: Or the “hunter seekers” of the 1965 novel Dune
Smart Watches: A character of the 1st half of the 20th century, “Dick Tracy” and his two-way radio watch, which showed up in 1963
There is this exciting quotation by Jim Hill in the article “My Plexiglas and Light Sculptures” as I was digging to find other early computer art.
It reads like this:
The artist serves society as a teacher of certain aspects of the present. Marshall McLuhan explains this future as follow: “The power of the arts to anticipate future social and technological developments, by a generation and more has long been recognized … Art acts as radar acts as “an early alarm system” … This concept of the arts as prophetics, contrasts with the popular idea of them as mere self-expression. McLuhan describes the artist’s function as one which presents current social and technological changes to society. The visual artist makes objects which are of abstractions of selected portions of the present social environment. - Leonardo, Vol 3 pp.9-17 1970
I’ll leave it at that because I need to think more. But one has to ponder the questions:
If art is prophetic, how does it emerge? Does art have a sentient nature driven by the collective artistic pursuit?
One might suggest the artist or the collective of artists are the ones who drive the social conscience. But does that affect how or why, or what we create?
Are the synthesis of art and its output what drives future new ideas/innovations? If so, what responsibilities do we have to it?
Naturally, these questions are a bit more philosophical, but I think something is interesting to query in that thread of thought.
Mind you, I am sure there has been thought and probably much written around this. But it is the brush strokes of thought that drive new ideas.
I hope you all have a wonderful weekend!
Chris Ried
Who Are We?
Charles and Collette Bangert
Early in her career, before her work in digital media, Bangert's paintings and drawings received critical attention. (link)
Charles Bangert was employed at the University of Kansas, and when the university was given a plotter in 1967, he was asked to test it. (Atari Archives)
“The Bangerts’ work thus explores the act of creation, regardless of medium, by utilizing the computer to push the boundaries of praxis.” (link)
Their work was anything but deterministic. Instead, it provided a sense of handcraft that explored how the digital becomes interwoven with the natural.
Next week… Who am I?
Leave a comment if you think you have an answer!
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