creativity (2)

Oh, I wish I would have known about this: Computational Creativity : An Interdisciplinary Approach http://www.dagstuhl.de/de/programm/kalender/semhp/?semnr=09291 This is what they wrote in the seminar website: ah, we can download the research papers in pdf!! very cool... 12.07.09 - 17.07.09, Seminar 09291 Margaret Boden (University of Sussex - Brighton, GB) Mark d'Inverno (University of London, GB) Jon McCormack (Monash University - Clayton, AU) Motivation Artistic creativity remains a mysterious, enigmatic subject — a “grand challenge” for Computer Science. While computers have exceeded the capabilities of humans in a number of limited domains (e.g. chess playing, music classification, theorem proofs, induction), human creativity generally remains unchallenged by machines and is considered a fundamental factor in our intellectual success. There is a sense that artistic creativity is somehow “special” in a way that could not be captured in an algorithm, hence implemented on a machine. This seminar aims to show that creativity is indeed special, but that it can be an emergent property of mechanical processes. The seminar will address problems in computational creative discovery where computer processes assist in enhancing human creativity or may autonomously exhibit creative behavior independently. The intention is to develop ways of working with computation that achieve creative possibilities unattainable from any existing software systems. These goals will be developed in the context of artistic creation (visual art and music composition), however the results may be applicable to many forms of creative discovery. The specific seminar aims are to: * Contribute to fundamental research on our understanding of artistic creativity in humans and machines; * Develop new methodologies for creative design in digital media, with particular emphasis on evolutionary ecosystem dynamics, where new algorithms for creative discovery are inspired by biological processes; * Bring together researchers from a variety of disciplines and backgrounds, with coverage across the arts and sciences, but with a common goal of furthering our understanding of how computers may generate creative behaviour, using an interdisciplinary approach. Creativity is a vast and complex topic, investigated by many disciplines. In broad terms it involves the generation of something novel and appropriate (i.e. unexpected, valuable). In this seminar we focus on artificially creative systems, either simulated in software or software process working in synergetic tandem with a human artist. The necessary conditions for any artificial creative system must be the ability to interact with its environment, learn, and self-organise, and this is the basis of the seminar’s approach. Darwinian evolution has been described as the only theory with the explanatory power for the design and function of living systems, accounting for the amazing diversity and astonishing complexity of life. Evolutionary synthesis is a process capable of generating unprecedented novelty, i.e. it is creative. It has been able to create things like prokaryotes, eukaryotes, higher multicellularity and language through a non-teleological process of replication and selection. We would like to investigate, on a metaphoric level, the mechanisms of biological evolution in order to develop new approaches to computational creativity.
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Freedom + Creativity

Three words: Benefit Benefit Benefit!

Ever use craigslist? Here’s your chance to thank the man behind the site! May 6 Eyebeam will honor Craig Newmark and party to raise money for Eyebeam’s public programs, residencies and fellowships .

Other good news: Interactivos? deadline has been extended to Friday, May 2; two new intern opportunities to work with resident artist JooYoun Paek; Dirt Party testing for the Futuresonic conference; and Eyebeam’s star appearance at the Chelsea Block Party.

Online: videos of Eyebeam artists Friedrich Kirschner, Taeyoon Choi, and Stephanie Rothenburg at the Synthetic Times reception, and an in-depth interview with Eyebeam senior fellow Steve Lambert on National Public Radio.

We would also like to welcome, Sarah Cook, our curatorial fellow from acroass the pond. For curators interested in studio visits with Eyebeam artists—stop by during open office hours on Tuesdays between 2PM and 4PM, and Sarah will be happy to facilitate your visit!


This Week at Eyebeam:

May 3: A guided tour with Charlie The Magical Image-Digesting Robotic Duck

May 6: Eyebeam Benefit Celebrating Freedom and Creativity

May 17: Teen Mashup Remix: Creative Youth Workshops

New from our Labs:

May 1: Eyebeam at Futuresonic Conference 2008

May 1: Results of the iraqimemorial.org First Juror’s Review are in!

May 4: Friedrich Kirschner presents Eine Kleines Puppenspiel

May 9: Call for proposals Artist as Startup: Web Application as Cultural Intervention

Anti-Advertising Agency announces “Foundation For Freedom”, featured on NPR

Community:

May 4: GRL: The Complete First Season at the MoMA

May 9: Eyebeam at the Chelsea Block Party!


Camerautomata: Taeyoon Choi

May 3: A guided tour with Charlie The Magical Image-Digesting Robotic Duck

A guided tour with Charlie The Magical Image-Digesting Robotic Duck
Date: May 3, 2 – 4PM
Location: Eyebeam, 540 W. 21st St., NYC
Cost: Free. RSVP taeyoon AT eyebeam DOT org
www.camerautomata.org
www.tyshow.org

This guided tour is the first in a two month series exploring how images are produced and consumed in public spaces. Taeyoon Choi, recipient of Eyebeam’s 2008 Commission for Resident Artists and inventor of Charlie, will lead a walking tour from Eyebeam in Chelsea. After an introductory presentation of the project, participants will accompany Charlie on a photo-taking tour of the neighborhood. Participants are encouraged to bring their own cameras to help in document the experience.

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May 6: Eyebeam Benefit Celebrating Freedom and Creativity

Freedom + Creativity

Freedom and Creativity: Eyebeam 2008 Benefit
Date: Tuesday, May 6
6:30PM Cocktails | 7:30PM Dinner/Show | 9:30PM After-Party
Location: Eyebeam, 540 W. 21st St., NYC
Tickets: https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/528/t/6209/shop/shop.jsp?storefront_KEY=497

HONORING: Craig Newmark, craigslist founder and the Internet’s best known customer service representative.

Join us in honoring craigslist founder Craig Newmark for his commitment to public service and a free Internet! Support Eyebeam’s residencies, fellowships and public programs! Comedy Central’s John Mulaney will cue the night’s laugh track, NYC’s Misshapes will supply the after-party and much, much more!

Featuring:
Drawn & Magical A/V Performance: Zach Lieberman, Eyebeam fellow
Kinetic Shadow: Addie Wagenknecht, Eyebeam fellow
Excerpts from The Nebulous Object-Image Archive: Joe Winter, Eyebeam resident
Fame Game—social network re-invents fame
The Little Death
Hanging Space: Geraldine Juárez, Eyebeam senior fellow
Live visuals: Benton-C Bainbridge, Eyebeam alum
Plus: Special Guests, DJs, VJs, and more

EVENT CHAIRS: John S. Johnson | Jazz J. Merton

COMMITTEE CHAIRS: Tatiana Platt | Bryce Wolkowitz

BENEFIT COMMITTEE: Jed Alpert | Marc + Caryn Becker | Laura Dawn | Ze Frank | Andrea Harner | Garrett + Maureen Heher | Arianna Huffington | Jaime Johnson | Jonah Peretti | Lily Johnson Whitall | Marc Schiller

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: Amanda McDonald Crowley

MEDIA SPONSOR: GOOD Magazine
GOOD

Proceeds from the evening will help underwrite Eyebeam’s international fellowship and residency programs for artists and creative technologists, more than 300 of whom have benefited since 1997.

Tickets and information online: https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/528/t/6209/shop/shop.jsp?storefront_KEY=497

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May 17: Teen Mashup Remix: Creative Youth Workshops

Public Workshop + Presentations
Date: Saturday, May 17, 1–7PM. Presentations: 8PM
Location: The Change You Want to See, 84 Havemeyer St. (storefront), Williamsburg, Brooklyn
http://www.notanalternative.net/

Workshop for student residents
In continuation of Eyebeam resident Andrew Paterson’s Seeders ’N’ Leechers ’R’ Us project, Eyebeam student residents will take part in workshops at Eyebeam May 12 and 16 to remix audio-visual material found online and develop “fair-use” guidelines for fellow students and laymen.

Public Workshop + Presentations
A dozen participants selected from Eyebeam’s educational partners are invited to bring at least three clips to add to a pool of footage. During the workshop, they will learn to remix clips from the pool into short narrative sequences. The session will close with a screening of the finished pieces.
Workshops by:
Dan Winckler: http://danwinckler.com/vid/
Not An Alternative: http://thechangeyouwanttosee.org/
Jeff Crouse and David Jimison: http://www.digitalsituations.com/awbh/

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New from our Labs

May 1: Eyebeam at Futuresonic Conference 2008

Futuresonic Conference 2008: The Social Technology Summit
Date: May 1 – 2
Location: Contact Theatre, Manchester, UK
http://www.futuresonic.com/08/2008conf.html

May 1, 2–3:30PM: Collective Media
Spanning user-generated content, collaborative authoring and collectively owned media, this panel will feature case studies of initiatives from India to Germany. Panelists include: Platoniq (Olivier Schulbaum, Susana Noguero), Ravikant Shama (Sarai), Jennie Savage (STAR Radio), Eyebeam senior fellow Geraldine Juárez, Christine Hanson and Michael Schafae.

May 1, 5:30–11PM | May 2, 2 – 6PM: Dirt Party
Eyebeam senior fellow Jeff Crouse and Production Lab fellow David Jimison will present Dirt Party. Dirt Party is a performance in which salacious information about party attendees is gathered from sources including the web and presented to the entire audience.
Help dig up “Dirt” on the Futuresonic participants by logging on to http://futuresonic.dirtparty.org/, and view some examples here: http://futuresonic.dirtparty.org/thumbs.

May 2, 10–11:30AM: Musical Interfaces
This panel will consider the mobile phone user as micro-DJ, a Toronto-wide open source musical interface and more. Panelists include: Florian Hollerweger, Gauti Sigthorsson, Steve Daniels, and Eyebeam resident Jamie Allen.

Additional Events:
Freeware: The Manchester Collection
May 3, time TBD (check the Futuresonic website for schedule) | Fashion show: May 4
Zion Art Center | Free
A workshop about Manchester, its people and the stuff they give away. This session will be dedicated to creating fashion items from freecycled materials collected around the city. The clothes will be presented in a community fashion show at the end of the workshop.

Finally, members of CRUMB (Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss) will be curating couples and setting up blind dates for gun-shy curators and artists. Find your soulmate—stop by the mezzanine at the Contact Theatre on Friday, May 2, 2–5PM.

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May 1: The results of the iraqimemorial.org First Juror’s Review are in!

A recipient of Eyebeam’s 2008 commission for Resident Artists, Joseph DeLappe’s, iraqimemorial.org has garnered 125 proposals from 30 nations. On May 1, the results of the First Juror’s Review of memorial proposals will be posted to the site. Jurors for the project were invited to create individual rankings of their top ten proposals. The jurors for the project are:
Yaelle Amir, curator and writer, New York City
Dr Bernadette Buckley, Goldsmiths University of London
Monica Narula & Shuddhabrata Sengupta, The Raqs Media Collective, New Delhi, India
Dr. David Simpson, University of California, Davis
John David Spiak, curator, Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe
Dr. Marjorie Vecchio, Director, Sheppard Fine Arts Gallery, University of Nevada, Reno

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Puppet play beta

May 4: Friedrich Kirschner presents Eine Kleines Puppenspiel

Ein Kleines Puppenspiel
Date: May 4 – 6
Location: Trickfilm Festival, Stuttgart, Germany

Friedrich Kirschner, a fellow in the Eyebeam Production Lab, will perform his piece Ein Kleines Puppenspiel on May 4 as part of the International Trickfilm Festival in Stuttgart, Germany. Kirschner will also lead workshops on machinima and moviesandbox on May 5 and 6.

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May 9: Call for proposals: Artist as Startup: Web Application as Cultural Intervention

Deadline for proposals: May 9
Date: February 25 – 28, 2009
Location: College Art Association Conference, Los Angeles
Submission Details: http://www.collegeart.org/pdf/CallforParticipation2009.pdf.

Senior fellow Michael Mandiberg will chair a panel at the 2009 College Art Association Conference in LA, and is accepting proposals for papers on the topic of web artists making cultural interventions through “life- like” functioning tools and applications. Artists, theorists and historians are all welcome to submit an abstract.

Send applications to Michael Mandiberg, Michael AT Mandiberg DOT com (email applications preferred), or at College of Staten Island, City University of New York, Dept. of Media Culture, 2800 Victory Blvd., Staten Island, NY 10314.

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Anti-Advertising Agency announces “Foundation For Freedom”, featured on NPR

The most creative and forward-thinking professionals of our time work in marketing. The Anti-Advertising Agency Foundation For Freedom wants them to quit. And they’re offering cash.

Read about Eyebeam senior fellow Steve Lambert and Anne Elizabeth Moore’s new project on the Anti-Advertising Agency site:
http://antiadvertisingagency.com/projects/foundation-for-freedom
or on Gawker:
http://gawker.com/381161/get-paid-to-quit-the-advertising-industry

Plus: Check out recent interviews with Steve Lambert on National Public Radio , and in Gelf Magazine.

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Community

May 4: GRL: The Complete First Season at the MoMA

GRL: The First Season
Date: May 4, 8–11PM
Location MoMa Titus Theatre, 11 W 53rd St., NYC
Tickets: http://www.moma.org/calendar/ev_tickets.php?id=8571&tid=VS0000195&dept=VS

Info about the screening: http://graffitiresearchlab.com/?p=140

PopRally invites you to a screening of Graffiti Research Lab: The Complete First Season, a film documenting the adventures of an architect and an engineer who quit their day jobs to develop high-tech tools for the art underground. Featuring insightful and humorous commentary by GRL founders James Powderly and Evan Roth, The Complete First Season argues for free speech in public, open source in pop culture, the hacker spirit in graffiti, and not asking permission in general. The film premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival.

The screening will be followed by a panel discussion with Graffiti Research Lab members and surprise guests. Stay for the party afterwards, featuring music by Javelin and a final chance to see MoMA’s Design and the Elastic Mind exhibition, which includes the work of the GRL.

Watch the trailer for GRL: The Complete First Season: http://graffitiresearchlab.com/?page_id=142#video

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Chelsea Block Party

May 9: Eyebeam at the Chelsea Block Party!

Citizens Committee for New York City Block Party
Date: May 9, 4–8PM
Location: Hudson Guild Place, 26th St., NYC (btw. 9th and 10th Aves.)

Eyebeam artist Taeyoon Choi’s infamous picture-taking duck will be making an appearance at the local block party organized by the Citizens Committee for New York City. Learn about other Eyebeam projects, meet your neighbors or just come by and hang out! Other groups at the block party include: Pantomonium Productions Theater Group; Chelsea Community Supported Agriculture; Transportation Alternatives; Just Food; Chelsea Tenant Action Committee; Hudson Guild.

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Founded in 1997, Eyebeam is an art and technology center that provides a fertile context and state-of-the-art tools for digital experimentation. It is a lively incubator of creativity and thought, where artists and technologists actively engage with the larger culture, addressing the issues and concerns of our time. Eyebeam challenges convention, celebrates the hack, educates the next generation, encourages collaboration, freely offers its output to the community, and invites the public to share in a spirit of openness: open source, open content and open distribution.

Eyebeam’s current programs are made possible through the generous support of The Atlantic Foundation, The Pacific Foundation, the Johnson Art and Education Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Jerome Foundation, Dewar’s, Deep Green Living, ConEdison, Datagram, Electric Artists Inc.; public funds from New York City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency; and many generous individuals. For a complete list of Eyebeam supporters, please visit http://www.eyebeam.org/donate.


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