Alan Turing and John Foxx feature at the London Kinetica Art Fair

 by Martin Belam, 19 February 2010

A couple of weeks back I went to the Kinetica Art Fair held at P3 in London. A couple of things caught my eye.

Kinetica Art Fair logo

The Aikon Project is trying to get computers to imitate the strokes that a human artist might make when creating a portrait. To that end they have some 'sketches' by machines of computer heroes Charles Babbage, Ada Lovelace and Alan Turing.

Aikon project postcards of Alan Turing and Ada Lovelace

Another piece, "No numbers", examined our notions of digital piracy. A machine is silently playing a track by John Foxx. Sample by sample, the numbers that make up the digital recording are displayed. Visitors are encouraged to write the numbers they see down in a book. In this way, at the end of the four weeks it takes to work through the track at that speed, you should have the numerical recipe for a perfect digital copy.

'No numbers' at the Kinetica Art Fair

Since it was an exhibition of moving art, it seemed appropriate to make moving pictures of it. Here is a two minute clip-reel I made of some of the exhibits I enjoyed.

3 Comments

Oh man...terminator here we come! The machines will soon be taking over the world :-)

I'll take on the machines any day! Pen, pencil, and brush will be my weapons to take back the world from the mechanized hoard.

My kind of art show! Amazing. I think Turing would be honoured and intrigued by a machine rendering of his portrait.
Can we persuade the fair to come to San Francisco?

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