You are going to create an illustration using generative art. Must be able to make a print up to 16x20 @ 150 ppi. Read through the information below and play around. Post at least 3 experiments. Research Generative Art. Find as many program/tutorials as you can find. Post at least 3 examples of generative art that you like as well as links to where it came from.
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New Media is much more than trying to mimic traditional media by way of a computer. To this end, you will learn a little about generative art and combine some with your photos.
Scribbler  is one of the cooler things that I have come across lately. I have  wanted to introduce students to generative art for some time, but hadn't  found a readily accessible means to do so until now.
Generative art  is digital art in which various algorithms (math formulas) are used to  determine the line, composition, color, etc. Basically, it is art  created by software. Some of the earliest digital art was generative  art.
Please begin by reading this Wikipedia article on generative art. Fractals are a very popular type of generative art. Here is a link to an online fractal generator. As you change the variables, the fractal that is generated changes.
Scribbler  takes a neat approach in that it combines user input with generative  output. Essentially, it allows you to anticipate and influence its  output.
It may seem like a novelty at first, but there are numerous  means of modifying the output of the software as it is "scribbling". You  can vary the transparency of the line, the thickness of the line, and  the amount of "Scribbleness" which I interpret as a combination of the  size of the scribbles and its randomness.
I  have included an example of a piece that I began with just six strokes.  As it ran, I paused it and added additional strokes in anticipation of  Scribbler's inclusion into the larger composition. (Image is not up at  the moment...)
The one thing that is missing is a Save command. You have to take a screen grab in order to have a version of your work.
See below for instructions on how to do this.
How to take a screen grab
A  screen grab, or screen capture, is a recording of what appears on your  computer screen. There are innumerable uses for screen grabs. For  example, my students are working on a project in which they need to pull  a screen grab of a map into Illustrator for use as a template. I use  them to record purchase receipts and to take images for use in tutorials  and handouts. Depending on your operating system, the means of creating  screen grabs varies widely. Below are links on how to take screen grabs  with the most popular operating systems.
How to take a screen grab on a Mac
How to take a screen grab on Windows XP machine
How to take a screen grab on Windows Vista or Windows 7 machine
I would like you to save it as a PNG file rather than a JPEG if your screen grab software allows for this.
Muro - a online drawing application with some generative art "brushes". Some of it is similar to Scribbler and some of it is similar to some stuff that you can draw in Illustrator. It hosted by Deviant Art. Some brushes are unavailable as you have to pay for them to unlock them.
Alyssa  posted her generative art images and they look really awesome so if you  would like to post them, I would be happy to see them.
Discussion questions:
- What is a PNG file? What is a JPEG file? What are the differences?
 - Why would I ask you to save the file as a PNG rather than a JPEG?
 - Other than the hassle of taking the screen grab of the completed image, what is the disadvantage of not allowing the user to save the Scribbled piece?
 - What do you think of Scribbler?
 - What do you think of generative art?
 
Scribbler was not a pure generative art application because it built on top of the user's mark. For this assignment, you will be using a few other applications which also use generative properties along with your marks.
Here is an online application  that produces generative art based on user input, audio, and imagery.  It only allows the user limited input, but the results are still pretty  amazing. You select from a few variables including the selection of a  song, arrange a path in a way that you would like, and then the work is  created based on the colors in the photo that you selected and the audio  properties of the song. It allows you to save a PNG from any point in  the process. Please play around with it.
There is also a downloadable version of the program for PCs for about $15. It has some additional features and can save images at much higher resolutions up to 6000x4000. It will also allow you to save the image as TIFFs rather than JPEGs.
Please  spend some time playing around with all the variables and making  drawing until you get the hang of it. You don’t have to draw something  literal like a dog, but I want like to you to try to draw an image that  evokes a particular emotion. You can probably easily come up with some  ideas about what anger looks like in flames, but what does happy look  like in flames?
Lastly,  check out the other “experiments” of the Flame creator. They are pretty  amazing. None of them are as developed as Flame though, so you will  have to take a screen grab of your work.
For  Monday, I asked you to play with these apps and any other generative  art apps that you come across, take some photos that you feel will work  well with type of imagery, create two images combining photographic and  generative art imagery (and anything else you want). We will look at the  images first thing on Monday morning.


