HSE 01, Nov. 6, 2021

a note about the lecture style

  • interrupt me anytime if you don't understand, and especially do so because most pieces of information will have consequence for what follows
  • hold discussion questions for the end

thanks to Stas and you all for this opportunity!

three discussions on algorithmic art and live coding

  1. Nov. 6: a pragmatic aesthetic theory
  2. Nov. 13: layers of algorithmic processes and interaction
  3. Nov. 20: openness

today's schedule:

  1. 16:20 - 17:40: discussion of a pragmatic aesthetic theory
  2. 17:40 - 18:00
  3. 18:00 - 19:10: thoughts about programming, understanding your projects and goals

outline

  1. toward a pragmatic aesthetic theory (from my background on)
  2. a pragmatic aesthetic theory and its application to algorithmic art
  3. the algorithm as an affector

toward a pragmatic aesthetic theory

1981: type-in programs in basic, TI-994A

1987-1988: Kitaro, Vangelis, Wendy Carlos, and my Yamaha PortaSound PSS-470

1990: Pascal on a Mac: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal_(programming_language)

1994: Max for MIDI, TurboSynth, ARP 2600, Csound

1997: George Brecht's Water Yam

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Yam_(artist%27s_book)
  • Fluxus

1999: Adrian Ward's Autoillustrator https://artelectronicmedia.com/en/artwork/auto-illustrator/

2001: Autechre, Confield

2005: SuperCollider

2006: Lisp, Scheme

2007: Conductive (Haskell), live coding

2015: completed doctoral degree “Affect-Based Aesthetic Evaluation and Development of Abstractions for Rhythm in Live Coding”

2021: Conductive port to JavaScript

my doctoral research, which became an essential part of my practice

a need to explain the aesthetic experience of live coding for people who are predominantly visual artists

other aesthetic theories (croce, kant's Critique of Judgment, etc)

other thinkers

epistemology, phenomenology, teleology, aesthetics

John Dewey, Art as Experience: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/dewey-aesthetics/

dewey's art as experience

aesthetic experience

psychological theories of stimulus and affect

Emotional Responses to Multisensory Environmental Stimuli: A Conceptual Framework and Literature Review (2016)

  1. useful framework!
  2. too mechanistic; i don't hold a mechanistic world view, but we ignore neurobiology to our peril
  3. doesn't map well for art, such as the incongruent stimuli leading to negative valence
  4. suspect there is a confusion of correlation and causation among the reviewed papers

important affect: arousal and pleasure

“Like Michon et al. (2005), they argued that the novelty of a moderate incongruency probably induced arousal, which mediated favorable evaluations (external perspective). A possible explanation for these findings may be found in Berlyne’s (1960) optimal arousal theory, which suggests that the relation between an individual’s level of arousal and affective state can be represented by a bell-shaped (inverted-U) function. Individuals usually prefer medium levels of arousal. Stimuli causing extreme (either too high or too low) levels of arousal result in negative affect. This could also explain the results found by Morrin and Chebat (2005) and Fenko and Loock (2014).”

“The second is to lay the foundation for a structural and potentially computational and predictive model of the effects of multisensory environmental stimuli on, for instance, emotions or behavior.”

a similar goal to one that i have expressed, to have an aesthetic theory that i can turn into a computation aesthetic judgment system to be employed by AI in the process of algorithmic composition.

aesthetic experience: the enjoyment of awareness and the recognition of the affect in those, to some extent dissociated with their material meaning for your personal life

affect: a feeling

affector: a percept causing feelings (outer percepts, inner percepts)

affectee: the experiencer of those feelings

radical definition of art and artist

art as a network of affectors that create an aesthetic experience

art exists in the experience of something as an aesthetic experience

to experience something aesthetically makes it into art, and if it wasn't intended that way, you become the artist!

artist: someone who arranges affectors into an aesthetic experience

the artist is the first audience member, though the network of affectors is remarkably different!

things that are or can be art:

  • drawing
  • painting
  • dance
  • music
  • things considered craft
  • sporting events
  • sporting event broadcasts
  • guided historical walks
  • algorithms

is it art or not? boring question…

is it good or bad art? a problematic question (see Tao Te Ching)… thus a turn to a pragmatic aesthetic theory

judgement of aesthetic experience

does the assembled network of affectors achieve the purpose of the work?

  • yes: good, enjoy! be aware! learn! then proceed to no…
  • no: revise goal or revise art

what is the purpose of the work?

artist vs designer

  • artist decides the audience and purpose of the work, the primary purpose being an affective experience
  • a designer is told the audience and purpose of the work, and there can be other primary purposes or parallel primary purposes

some stage-related goals:

  • experimentation, exploration
  • implementation, development
  • polishing, refinement, perfection (ha!)

application to algorithmic art

the affector network in algorithmic art

  1. artistic process
  2. algorithm
  3. algorithmic output
  4. other output
  5. output device(s)
  6. medium/media into which output is received
  7. other environmental factors
  8. (in performance) the artist (everything about their presence)
  9. artist persona
  10. background of the exhibition/event
  11. background of the audience member

the algorithm as an affector

algorithm as an effector

algorithms not only as functional tools but also as affectors and therefore part of art

how does the user (artist) experience the algorithm?

how does the audience experience the algorithm?

  • usability, affordances
  • easy or difficult to understand
  • fragile or robust
  • range of what it can produce
  • quality of what it produces
  • how well it integrates with other parts of the system
  • how does it feel to use it?

algorithm is exposed: direct affector

algorithm is hidden: indirect affector

(will be important in our discussion of openness on Nov. 20!)

types of experience:

  1. naturalistic vs mechanical or alien
  2. warm vs cold
  3. clear or inscrutable
  4. verbose or concise
  5. simple or complex (sometimes “a human could do this” vs. “a human couldn't do this”)
  6. etc

a catalog of algorithms in my musical work… algorithms for:

  1. generating base rhythms (stochastic, lsystem, euclidean, cropped euclidiean)
  2. generating variations at various densities
  3. creating sample patterns
  4. varying the arrangement of active voices (conductors)
  5. controlling the conductors
  6. interaction with the system
  7. display for me and the audience

goals

affective response i aim for

papers

2013. “Towards Useful Aesthetic Evaluations of Live Coding.” In Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference. Perth, Australia. http://renickbell.net/pdf/renick-bell-icmc-2013.pdf

2013. “Pragmatic Aesthetic Evaluation of Abstractions for Live Coding.” In Proceedings of Meeting No. 17 of the Japanese Society for Sonic Arts. Nagoya, Japan: The Japanese Society for Sonic Arts. http://www.jssa.info/doku.php?id=journal017

2013. “Considering Interaction in Live Coding through a Pragmatic Aesthetic Theory.” In Proceedings of SI13, NTU/ADM Symposium on Sound and Interactivity. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://soundislands.com/si13/proceedings/papers/04-Considering%20Interaction%20in%20Live%20Coding%20through%20a%20Pragmatic%20Aesthetic%20Theory.pdf

2013. “Pragmatically Judging Generators.” In Proceedings of the Generative Art 2013 Conference. Milan, Italy. http://www.generativeart.com/ga2013xWEB/proceedings1/17.pdf

2014. “Considering Interaction in Live Coding through a Pragmatic Aesthetic Theory.” eContact! 16 (2). http://cec.sonus.ca/econtact/16_2/bell_livecoding.html (This paper is a revised version of the paper with the same title published in 2013.)

unanswered questions and discussion

  1. questions about the presentation so far
  2. opinions or feelings about the presentation so far
  3. references you want to suggest
  4. other questions
  5. your expectations or hopes for our remaining two sessions
  6. … other?
some comments and questions

gleb - clarify “intentions”

ivan - in recorded work, is the algorithm an indirect or direct affector… talked about turning points, music seemed “more formal” than the live recording, the album with fis sounded more like recordings of live performances

ivan - if it's all about affect, the algorithm is an affector, made me think about the manipulating the perception, now i see a practice ot use algorithm as an attempt to have more control on music perception

ivan - choosing an algorithm, still manipulating yourself,

olga - ai, neural network, representing human ethic problems, reflecting on it and talking about it is one of the solutions, agreed with the media representation of AI, more open and wide discussion it would help

ivan - what do you htink about the future of this kind of culture

ivan - new extensions, a screen with code, maybe in the future there will be some new kinds of extensions for affecting perception

gleb - overview of algorithmic music (musicians, techniques, concepts)

vlad - when we learn max and PD, the main thing we learned were creating thigns that are not really difficult and sequencing, like pd but only making sequencers, to make cool sounds it takes a lot of time, hear examples from you how to make it easier to generate complex timbres

ivan - learn some warping techniques, interesting techniques of working with samples

maria - worried she is slow, and just wants to get the method

vlad - how to prepare a big live set in terms of strategy and logic

olga - i have lots of struggle with live, i want to control everything, i need some freedom, how to control the parameters

maria - inspiriring to hear about poetic text while algorithmic coding, when you interact with people

vlad - maybe i know some examples of other ways to communicate with audience, but not text, maybe sensors, or not with one human or the whole dancefloor, source to take information to generate other things, data sonification, data sonification with feedback is more interesting

part 2, introductions and programming

email to renick@gmail.com

  1. name
  2. professional status or aspiration
  3. three world-view references
  4. your programming experience (including HTML and visual patchers, modular synthesis)
  5. your current work or a recent work
  6. who is the audience for your work?
  7. what is the goal of your work?
  8. analyze your own work in regards to a network of affectors
  9. what affective response do you want? how do you intend to provoke it?

today: what you can write in 10 minutes

for next time: just a bit more thought and detail, + links!

a short side-note: why text based coding instead of a patcher

decomposing a problem into solvable subproblems

writing code so that you can understand it later

learning to do abstraction (creating reusable parts)

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  • by renick