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.
The links between the world of art and computing have multiplied and become more complex. It finds its foundations, its structures its tensions in the two worlds of origin: that of art and that of computer science.
Collection Battle of robots .Battle of robots One of the uses of robots is surely to fight each other. Right now the drone war has begun in Russia and Ukraine.
Behind computers there are always men but now more and more methodically helped by methodical artificial intelligences. They will encounter other artificial intelligences trying to destroy them.
This is the struggle of the machines interviewed by Georges Bernanos in 1947 La France Contre les Robots. Struggles that fictional science has developed in epic novels like the author Asimov.
The imagery presented is a metaphor of these struggles.
It is made from an AI that shows its own aggressiveness towards other machines from images searched in the network.
Robots, in the traditional sense, do not watch us with intent or consciousness as humans do. Robots are machines programmed to perform specific tasks or functions, often in a controlled and pre-determined manner. They lack the ability to observe or make sense of the world in the way humans do.
However, there are various types of technology and devices equipped with sensors and cameras that can capture images and data from their surroundings. These devices are often used for surveillance, monitoring, or data collection purposes. Examples include security cameras, drones, and even some autonomous vehicles. In these cases, it is not the robots themselves that are watching us, but rather the technology they are equipped with that can be used for monitoring and observation.
It's essential to distinguish between the capabilities and intentions of machines and the use of technology for specific purposes. While technology can capture data and images, it does so as part of a programmed or designed function, without consciousness or intent. Concerns related to privacy and surveillance often arise from how these technologies are used and the policies and regulations governing their use.