Tuesday, 30 April 2024

A CLUSTER OF INTERESTS FOR COMMENT


Instead of taking each item and developing the issues in more detail, the reference is given along with the portion of text from it that caught the eye; comments have been made to explain why this matter has been chosen to be noted here.



https://www.telegraph.co.uk/art/artists/sculptor-tony-cragg-castle-howard-exhibition/

HEADLINE: Sculptor Tony Cragg: 'Art has become surrounded by middle-class, intellectual bulls---'

NOTE:

What can one say, but agree?



https://www.archdaily.com/1013450/how-are-ai-systems-assisting-architects-and-designers

Among the first AI tools to be used by architects and designers have been image generation engines such as DALL-E, Midjourney and Stable Diffusion, that transform text prompts into images. This encourages designers to use language-based conceptualization, often helping to test out ideas quickly and lowering the knowledge threshold for designing, for better or for worse. (my bold text)

NOTE:

One has to remember the proverb: a little knowledge is a dangerous thing.# We need to be very wary of AI matters. Here, architecture is shaped from words, ‘as if’ one can directly describe possibilities and have them realised ‘automatically’ while still making sense of the whole.



One can draw a parallel with:

https://www.businessinsider.com/ai-art-painter-synesthesia-composed-music-from-paintings-2024-4

where art is used to create music, again, ‘as if’ . . .

HEADLINE: I'm using my synesthesia to create a new genre of AI art. The technology can 'read' my paintings and help me compose music.

NOTE:

What can one say? John Betjeman commented on the artists who wrote music and choreographed dance to some of his poems, that he admired the effort but thought that it added very little to the whole. Do we just enjoy fun and games; playing with AI, ‘as if,’ on the off chance, it might be meaningful? It reminds one of the parent who always gave the children quality paper to draw and paint on in case one scribble might turn out to be ‘a work of art.’



https://fstoppers.com/gear/beyond-ordinary-expanding-your-photography-weird-lenses-665803

For photographers seeking unique and creative avenues, exploring adapted lenses opens up a world of possibilities. This journey into adapted lenses can lead to surprising and unusual results and expand your creativity.

NOTE:

The text describes what is happening in architecture at present – a search for carefully selected, specially framed images - and reinforces the notion that to be ‘creative,’ one has to be different, unusual and unique, making one a bespoke genius. Photography is setting the scene for the designer who seeks out things that can be seen to be bespoke, from the hands of a genius.




https://www.realestate.com.au/property-townhouse-qld-clayfield-144723732

HEADLINE: Completed luxury.

NOTE:

This townhouse project is promoted with the usual real estate hype, but has a tight plan, with no indication of any context, when this is critical. The ‘Family’ space indicates a lounge that allows residents to stare at the bathroom door; while the dining room table sits in a no-man’s-land passageway, squeezing the lounge area into a corner and offering limited chair space around the table.



https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/apr/28/nick-bostrom-controversial-future-of-humanity-institute-closure-longtermism-affective-altruism

Two weeks ago it was quietly announced that the Future of Humanity Institute, the renowned multidisciplinary research centre in Oxford, no longer had a future.

Currently it seems that there is a negative correlation in some places between intellectual achievement and fertility. If such selection were to operate over a long period of time, we might evolve into a less brainy but more fertile species, homo philoprogenitus (‘lover of many offspring’).”

NOTE:

Is this the worry with AI?



https://www.mixbook.com/family-photo-books

"Mixbook has been our go-to choice for preserving our family memories for several years now. Their stunning coffee table books have become a cherished way to safeguard and share our family's precious memories for years to come." - Jennifer

NOTE:

Family photographs take on a new understanding as coffee table books. Our digital world is creating a new, make-believe universe that we can begin to believe in, leaving us with less than nothing, all when the family photos once were a true reference of past times, with no intent to become a slick publication.



https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2024/apr/28/the-almost-radical-rebirth-of-kings-cross-london-alison-brooks-architects-cadence

HEADLINE: Nervous of its own boldness.

There’s a reluctance to let things be fully what they want to be, whether a thumping big building, or an industrial relic, or a pavement cafe. This possibly comes from a de-risking attitude – with many hazards in the realisation of the project, the developers may not have wanted to take too many chances with the architecture.

I’d only wish that in its latest transformation King’s Cross had as much personality as in previous iterations.

NOTE:

An interesting review that is unusually frank. Architecture and urban planning needs much more careful analysis/review like this.



https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1182818-saudi-arabias-neom-the-line-city-project-is-not-doing-well

HEADLINE:Neom officials desperately look for investors as completion becomes difficult.

Earlier, The line was planned to cover an area of 170 kilometres and house at least 1.5 million people, but after cutting it down, now it will only be 2.4 kilometres with less than 30,000 residents.

NOTE:

The concept always seemed unbelievable as a dimension and an idea. Even now, with this shorter version, one has to be concerned with mirrored walls in a desert, as well as the quality of life in between.



https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-04-29/venice-biennale-golden-lion-australia-archie-moore-artist/103730100?

utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other

The work features hundreds of documents and a vast hand-drawn family tree, which covers the entire pavilion and maps Moore's ancestry over some 2,400 generations.

"Thus 65,000 years of history (both recorded and lost) are inscribed on the dark walls as well as on the ceiling, asking viewers to fill in blanks and take in the inherent fragility of this mournful archive," the jury said in its citation.

NOTE:

The idea that 65,000 years of history can be documented by one person is astonishing - impossible; but asking the viewers to fill in the blanks only reinforces the ad hoc, now almost cliché notion of scribbles, or anything unknown and abstract – ‘interesting’ - being meaningful, with everyone asked to bring their own interpretations and values to the work. Art has to have more substantial roots than this DIY excuse that enhances voids. Art is not personal. Ananda Coomaraswamy noted how matters personal only mislead and distort, and encourage ambitious notions of ‘creative genius’ where mystery is allowed to linger in nothingness.



https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2024-04-29/giant-short-faced-kangaroo-fossil-found-nightshade-cave/103753014?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other

. . . a 50,000-year-old short-faced kangaroo skeleton . . .

The skeleton has 71 per cent of its bones, which makes it the most complete fossil skeleton ever discovered in a Victorian cave.

"The last and first time a comparably complete example of this species of kangaroo was found was in the mid-1970s. It's been nearly 50 years."

NOTE:

A complete skeleton has never ever been seen, but scientists can say with apparent certainty that the 150 bones discovered in this cave represents 71% of the total; not ‘approximately 70%,’ or even ‘72%,’ but ‘71%.’ Who might know? One is reminded how scientists claim to have cracked the human genome when the figure known is not 100%.*

ALSO:

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024/apr/29/unlike-anything-today-gippsland-fossil-unlocks-secrets-of-kangaroo-that-died-out-46000-years-ago


NOTE: 

Absolute certainty grows from a vague, perhaps hopeful understanding.



https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-04-29/national-museum-australia-mr-squiggle-norman-hetherington/103773010?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other

"Whole generations of Australians now will be able to look at this collection and really come to understand what their potential is to be creative, to be artistic, to have fun, explore, imagine and create."

NOTE:

The idea that creativity is being artistic, to have fun, explore, imagine and create reinforces the ‘You too can be an artist’ just by doing different, interesting things, an understanding that is promoted by the notion suggested above, (https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-04-29/venice-biennale-golden-lion-australia-archie-moore-artist/103730100 . . .), where everyone is asked to read whatever they see in the thing being observed as being the value of the artful genius that knows nothing of this.


SUMMARY

Most of these ‘news’ items all appeared on the one day, with a couple appearing on the day following. There is a nagging irritation in these pieces that relates to creativity, AI, publishing, and meaning in architecture, and the casual acceptance of our scientific, ‘rational’ world. The general cliché view is that things have to be interesting, different, and fun to be creative; that AI can provide us with instant creativity; and that publications can, and do, illustrate architecture likewise, with carefully framed, quirky pieces and parts that the viewer is asked to piece together and add value to the interpretations to create meaning; and as for science, "We believe."

The response to this subtle referencing is that we need to be wary of science and its hype; that we have to understand creativity and meaning in a different, more coherent, organic, less personal manner; and that we need a rigorous critical eye to sustain our sensibilities – lest we forget them.


#

A slight misquotation of Alexander Pope's a little learning is a dangerous thing. The earliest use dates from a magazine published in 1774.

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/a_little_knowledge_is_a_dangerous_thing


*

If 150 bones is 71%, then there must be 211.267605634 bones in the animal's complete body: "Go figure!"

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.