MachineMachine /stream - tagged with aesthetic https://machinemachine.net/stream/feed en-us http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss LifePress therourke@gmail.com <![CDATA[What different types of visual and written 'instructions' are there?]]> http://ask.metafilter.com/mefi/290656

I am working on a project that relies on different ways to present instructions. I want to collect as many ways as possible. These can be visual, written, or otherwise, but each 'type' of instruction must have a design aesthetic or formulaic quality that is particular to it. So, for instance, recipes are usually laid out in a certain way; architectural blueprints have a design that we all recognise, as do maps, exploded diagrams, algorithms, technical schematics, toolkits... Can you help me think of more?

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Sun, 10 Jan 2016 05:31:11 -0800 http://ask.metafilter.com/mefi/290656
<![CDATA[The Radical Capacity of Glitch Art: Expression through an Aesthetic Rooted in Error - REDEFINE magazine]]> http://www.redefinemag.com/2014/glitch-art-expression-through-an-aesthetic-rooted-in-error/

In an experimental collision of chaos and purpose, glitch art exists as a low-key but important form of new media that broadly encompasses works of photography, video stills, moving pictures, and other image data that has been corrupted.

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Wed, 29 Apr 2015 20:02:03 -0700 http://www.redefinemag.com/2014/glitch-art-expression-through-an-aesthetic-rooted-in-error/
<![CDATA[What Is the "New Aesthetic"?]]> http://stunlaw.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/what-is-new-aesthetic.html

The New Aesthetic is now subject to discussion and critique on a number of forums, blogs, twitter threads, and so forth (for a list, see bibliography on Berry 2012a, but also Bridle 2012, Kaganskiy 2012, Sterling 2012). Many of these discussions have a particular existential flavour, questioning the existence and longevity of the New Aesthetic, for example, or beginning to draw the boundaries of what is 'in' or 'out' of the domain of New Aesthetic things (See Twitter 2012).[1] Grusin (2012), for example, claims: '[t]he "new aesthetic" is just the latest name for remediation, all dressed up with nowhere to go'. At such an early stage there is understandably some scepticism and, being mediated via Twitter, some sarcasm and dismissal, rather than substantive engagements with the questions raised by a moment presaged by the eruption of the digital into the everyday lifeworld, but also some partial support (for example see, Berry 2012b, Crumb 2012, Exinfoam 2012, Fernandez 2012, Owens 2012). Nonetheless, it is good to see so much discussion and excitement around the concept, however defined.

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Thu, 19 Apr 2012 01:21:06 -0700 http://stunlaw.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/what-is-new-aesthetic.html
<![CDATA[An Essay on the New Aesthetic]]> http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2012/04/an-essay-on-the-new-aesthetic/

The New Aesthetic concerns itself with “an eruption of the digital into the physical.” That eruption was inevitable.

If aesthetics could be hacked like code, then a beautiful rose, in the beak of a beautiful flamingo, flying in a beautiful sunset, would be 3X-beautiful. It isn’t. It never will be. You can’t make it be. That’s not the way the world works.

A sincere New Aesthetic would be a valiant, comprehensive effort to truly and sincerely engage with machine-generated imagery — not as a freak-show, a metaphor or a stimulus to the imagination — but as it exists. The real deal, down to the scraped-metal chip surface, if necessary.

Artists have used mechanical means of perception for a long time now. One doesn’t have to apologize for this nowadays, in the way Baudelaire used to wring his hands over daguerreotype cameras. That fight’s over. Everybody’s got hardware. People who can’t read have hardware. Every ivory tower we possess is saturated with hardware.

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Thu, 05 Apr 2012 03:02:38 -0700 http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2012/04/an-essay-on-the-new-aesthetic/
<![CDATA[YooouuuTuuube]]> http://www.yooouuutuuube.com/v/?width=96&height=96&yt=TQuqeLBTetA&flux=1&direction=bottom_left

Create your own trip in sound and animation using YouTube video clips (this one features Alice in Wonderland)

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Tue, 19 Jul 2011 16:15:26 -0700 http://www.yooouuutuuube.com/v/?width=96&height=96&yt=TQuqeLBTetA&flux=1&direction=bottom_left
<![CDATA[Sorted Books project]]> http://www.ninakatchadourian.com/languagetranslation/sortedbooks.php

The Sorted Books project began in 1993 years ago and is ongoing. The project has taken place in many different places over the years, ranging form private homes to specialized public book collections. The process is the same in every case: culling through a collection of books, pulling particular titles, and eventually grouping the books into clusters so that the titles can be read in sequence, from top to bottom. The final results are shown either as photographs of the book clusters or as the actual stacks themselves, shown on the shelves of the library they were drawn from. Taken as a whole, the clusters from each sorting aim to examine that particular library's focus, idiosyncrasies, and inconsistencies — a cross-section of that library's holdings. At present, the Sorted Books project comprises more than 130 book clusters.

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Thu, 29 Apr 2010 15:20:00 -0700 http://www.ninakatchadourian.com/languagetranslation/sortedbooks.php