In this case, who is more vulnerable: the human who built the machine or the machine who is controlled by a human?
Tag: art
Kid interacting with “çocuk” kinetic sculpture
Painting with a Roomba and International Klein Blue
Addie Wagenknecht, Self portrait–loneliness is what we can’t do for each other. IKB dry pigment and resin on canvas. 80 x 90 in / 203.2 x 228.6 cm. 2017. Courtesy of bitforms gallery.
[…] as we become more dependent on digital devices to mediate our actions and interactions, we begin to experience them as “creatures” instead of machines and form bonds with them.
(source)
Jeff Thompson teaches his computer how to touch like him
Teaching my computer to touch me the way I touch it. Recorded gestures on my phone to machine learning to hallucinated gestures to robot arm.
Not touching you
Alcohol drinking robot companion
The Alcohol drinking Robot by, South Korean artist, Eunchan Park was invented to stop drinking alone.
“The secret of taste of alcohol totally depends on existence of partner”
The different machines involved in the show are installed on the viewers’ body
Inferno is a robotic performance inspired by the representation of the different levels of hell as described in Dante’s Inferno or the Singaporean Haw Par Villa’s Ten Courts of Hell (which is based on a Chinese Buddhist representation). […] In the many depictions of Hell, the punishments are always carried on the human body and not directly at the psychological level. The excruciating pain and also the eternal aspect of the punishment induces the latter.
The specificity of this performance resides in the fact that the different machines involved in the show are installed on the viewers’ body. The public then becomes an active part of the performance. Sometimes the viewers are free to move; sometimes they are in a partial or entire submission position, forced by the machines to act/react in a certain way. Some mechanical elements coerce the viewers in performing certain movements; others induce a physical reaction from them. For this performance of about an hour long, we have built 25 wearable robotic structures very similar to exoskeletons.
Bill Vorn