Data Art on Flowing Data
Turning Data Visualization Into Art: 7 Artists Use Data as a Muse.
Artists are using available technology to create masterpieces out of everything from disease and weather to Wi-Fi and the music of internet chatter.
Though we generally think of artists as slaves to a flash of inspiration, to the fickle muse, artistry today is interactive and deeply affected by the information age. As we communicate through our computers, tablets or smart phones, artists too are working through a digital lens, using the parameters of scientific data and information design as a source of inspiration.
While the mapping of the physical world is nothing new — think anatomy textbooks, for instance — now data like heart rates and Wi-Fi channels can be transformed into something creative, even interactive. Here are a few projects that use scientific data as their muse.
inc Stanza, Luke Jerram (?), Ben Rubin and Mark Hansen, Di Mainstone, David Bowen (Cloud Piano)
Making Art Out of Earthquakes – The Atlantic.
Mori http://www.ieor.berkeley.edu/~goldberg/art/mori/
Bloom (in collaboration with Fernanda and Viegas – http://hint.fm/projects/bloom/ ) references http://www.kennethnoland.com/ – an abstract painter. nice. I also think it is very similar to the Wired piece they did in 2008. Hmmm.
In this interview, KG talks about making a long-form artwork. This is what the NMR pieces will be – as long as the NMR community perpetuate and procreate the work can be ‘fed’ by the data. How do we create online work that has the ability to survive long-term?
Artificial Nature is a research project and an evolving series of art installations by Haru Ji and Graham Wakefield.
Jerzy Kedziora – Balancing Sculptures.
Use this guys as an example of a traditional artist that knows his material so well he can fabricate the fine balancing safely.
Really relevant work for the NMR project intro.
Go through further and explore use of data, anthropomorphisation, kinetic motion