Friday 29 May 2015

Exhibition News / Generator: Systems, Logic and the Analogue Art of Programming

Generator Print by MuirMcNeil

Generator |  Systems, Logic and the Analogue Art of Programming

Curated by Saturation Point Projects

11 June  - 11 July 2015, Kaleidoscope Gallery, Sevenoaks TN13 1LQ

Katrina Blannin, Christina France, Hanz Hancock, Patrick Morrissey, Andy Parkinson, Charley Peters, James Irwin, Mary Yacoob

“The idea becomes a machine that makes the art”
Sol LeWitt, Paragraphs on Conceptual Art (1967)

Rules and systems are a hallmark of every modernising period since the Enlightenment, presenting an alternative to tradition and intuition. A rule removes the possibility of interpretation and a system is able to create, automatically. Both are objective, counteracting the human tendency to influence or control outcomes. Rules and systems are in many ways opposed to the common notion of art as a field of personal expression. Generator presents a selection of artwork that is by nature ‘generative’, created once an artist cedes control to an external system or set of rules. The artwork thus results not from the wholly instinctive decisions of the artist, but is formed by objective rules or logical instructions that shape its process or material outcome.

In popular use today the term ‘generative art’ is often used as a reference to a form of recent computer art that creates work through a series of algorithms. In From Systems to Software Richard Wright describes systems artists working in the pre-digital age as the ‘last programmers before the computer made that practice synonymous with its own functioning’, making a distinction between systems art’s main concern with process, and computer programming's purpose to control. Generator explores the language of the contemporary analogue ‘programmatic’, in which logic-based systems are employed to define the creation of an art object.