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When:
Monday, January 23, 4:00 p.m.
Where: 6115 Gates and Hillman Centers
Scott Draves, Software Artist
Special Art Presentation
Abstract: Scott Draves will discuss the software behind his artwork and a massive Internet-wide art collaboration by 450,000 computers and
their owners. His Electric Sheep project combines his own open source genetic algorithms with "hot or not" voting
and Darwinian evolution. The result is a cyborg creative mind that perpetually creates generative art. The draft
form is a screensaver; Scott chooses his own favorites to be re-rendered in high resolution for his museum-quality
pieces, of which Generation 244, the piece at this dedication purchased by Carnegie Mellon’s School of Computer
Science, is one. Scott, a PhD graduate of Computer Science at CMU, will also discuss his web-GL project in
progress "Video Riot", done as part of his job at Google Inc. in New York City.
Scott Draves created the original Flame algorithm in 1991, the Bomb visual-musical instrument in 1995, and the
Electric Sheep in 1999. Draves' software artworks are released as open source and have been used for two decades
by many other artists and designers in their own work. Draves' work is currently on display at LACMA and has
been commissioned by Carnegie Mellon University and the state-of-the-art Adler Planetarium in Chicago.
Other works have been acquired by corporate and private collections nationally. Draves' website is permanently
included on MoMA.org as part of the Design and the Elastic Mind exhibit, and his work has appeared in Wired
and Discover magazines, as an official skin for Google Chrome, at the Museum of the Moving Image in New York
City, at Art Basel in Miami, and as the graphic identity for Siggraph 2008.
Draves won an honorable mention at Prix Ars Electronica in 1993 for his Flame algorithm. His work has garnered
notice from such competitions as Lumen_Ex in Extremadura, Spain; the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
Conference, Montreal; ACA Media Arts Festival, Tokyo; Life/Vida Madrid and File Prix Lux in Brazil. He has an
undergraduate degree in Mathematics from Brown University and a PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie
Mellon University.
Appointments: yano@cs.cmu.edu
3:30 pm - Refreshments
5:00 pm - Tour of Art in Gates&Hillman follows the presentation.
Poster
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