Inspiration

 

Here is where I will share some of the artists who inspire me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anna Ridler

Anna Ridler is an artist and researcher who works with systems of knowledge and how technologies are created in order to better understand the world.  She was listed as one of the nine “pioneering artists” exploring AI’s creative potential by Artnet and received an honorary mention in the 2019 Ars Electronica Golden Nica award for the category AI & Life Art.

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Memo Akten

Memo Akten is a multi-disciplinary artist, musician, and researcher from Istanbul, Turkey, currently based in Los Angeles. He creates Speculative Simulations and Data Dramatizations investigating the intricacies of human-machine entanglements. His work explores perception and states of consciousness; the tensions between ecology, technology, science and spirituality; and for more than a decade he’s been working with Artificial Intelligence, Big Data and our Collective Consciousness as scraped by the Internet, to reflect on the human condition, drawing connections between intelligence in nature, intelligence in machines, perception, consciousness, neuroscience, fundamental physics, ritual and religion. He writes code and uses algorithmic / data-driven design and aesthetics to create moving images, sounds, large-scale responsive installations and performances.

 

Hi is interested in the collisions between nature, science, technology, ethics, ritual, tradition and religion; especially in the context of the current ecological collapse, social and political polarizations, moral crises and technological submission.

 

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Mario Klingemann

Mario Klingemann is a German artist best known for his work involving neural networks, code, and algorithms. His works examine creativity, culture, and perception through machine learning and artificial intelligence, and have appeared at the Ars Electronica Festival, the Museum of Modern Art New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, the Photographers’ Gallery London, the Centre Pompidou Paris, and the British Library.

 

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