My creation process consists of superimposing different images using algorithms close to the AI that create a recomposition strategy as human memory could do. Human memory does not operate like a camera, it distorts, confuses, agglomerates, mixes and deforms. It is for me to go beyond the automations of the AI to find a new vision through a process of emergence. This consists in observing how photographic shooting, image fusion algorithms bring back to art.
jeudi 28 août 2008
Collage, assembly to the Tate Britain
A strange thing in the big French museums it has no department dedicated to artists' works there having worked on the collage(sticking). Rightly can be because the collage(sticking) assembly does not establish(constitute) an artistic movement, or be the object at the moment of a manifesto estimated by institutions or art history.
Picasso and Braque created the first Cubist collages in 1912. They incorporated printed material, such as newspaper or wallpaper, into their paintings and drawings, bringing new life to the play of illusion that was an important element of Cubism. These printed fragments were real objects that stood as images of themselves. In the same year, Picasso also started making three-dimensional assemblages of diverse ‘found’ materials, playing on a similar ambiguity between object and image.
The invention of collage, where art might be made out of everyday throwaway materials, has informed the course of much art of the last century. This display of British art of the last fifty years examines the continued relevance of this discovery for artistic practice. Constructed from rupture and discontinuity, collage offered artists and viewers a new way of seeing the world, bringing together disparate and sometimes contradictory elements to which often surprising meanings can immediately be given.
Often playful, this new way of understanding the world can also have a critical or polemical purpose. This is particularly true of the technique of photo-montage: collages constructed from photographs. This display traces the development of one aspect of the interchange between fine art and mass culture that still lies at the heart of contemporary art.
This display has been devised by curator Andrew Wilson Ben Nicholson OM 1894-1982, Victor Pasmore 1908-1998, Kurt Schwitters 1887-1948, George Fullard 1923-1973, Margaret Mellis born 1914, Francis Davison 1919-1984, John McHale 1922-1978, Tracey Emin born 1963, Sarah Lucas born 1962, Tracey Emin born 1963, Gwyther Irwin born 1931, Jim Lambie born 1964, John Stezaker born 1949, Peter Kennard born 1949, Peter Kennard born 1949, Damien Hirst born 1965.
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