But I was also exploring that with mathematics, by learning computer science, by learning how computers work, learning how to create programs that would also capture the complex nature of all the things that surround us.” “I was exploring that with photography by capturing the environments I was in. “My motivation was really to explore the world,” Tau told Euronews Culture. She holds a PhD in Artificial Intelligence, and says her science and artistic practices are two sides of the same coin.Ī visualisation of Lithuanian AI artist Ivona Tau's piece "Red Lights in Hongdae". Tau is a Lithuanian AI artist who works with generative neural networks to create motion paintings based on thousands of her own original photographs. While some digital artists like Faruq use technology as a tool to create new artworks, others like Ivona Tau use technology to interpret works they’ve already made, creating new pieces in the process. “I’m quite passionate about making those inroads because I do think there are people with genuine intentions and that some bad actors shine a bad light on an industry that I think is actually very creative and very exciting.” Humans working alongside machines “I do think there’s a big disconnect between the NFT world and the traditional art world,” Faruq said. He said his goal as co-curator of “Beyond the Screens” is to bring together the crypto world and the art world. Rife with references to Internet culture (Pepe the Frog makes regular appearances), Faruq’s works are chicken-scratched flashing snapshots of the banality of everyday urban life, the drinking, the gambling, the excessive screen time.
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