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dc.date.accessioned2019-06-26T12:38:04Z
dc.date.available2019-06-26T12:38:04Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/306
dc.descriptionThis text was presented at REFRESH! THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE HISTORIES OF ART, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY - September 28 - 0ct 1, as a peer-reviewed scholarly work chosen for inclusion. This text may have been or will be published and/or presented elsewhere by the author.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleMedia Art: Hybridization and Autonomy
dc.contributor.authorCouchot, Edmond
dc.description.abstractIn order to replace Media Art in its intercultural and historical context, the author attempts to define what characterizes it, beyond the sometimes great differences of its expressions. And what characterizes it is hybridization; a specific trait resulting from the crossing, in the artistic field, of technical, semiotic and aesthetic elements, whose provenance is heterogeneous. Hybridization is not specific to Media Art, it could even be considered as quite a constant feature of art in general. The first mass communication technologies favoured hybridization greatly, but with digital technologies, new forms of hybridization have emerged, of which the author would like to offer a typology. In particular, a hybridization between art and science, as, since then, science, through the means of computer languages, constitutes the most favoured of art´s tools and materials. The recent development of these computer languages, influenced by logical and formal models from cognitive science and technology, tends to endow computers, and consequently, art works with a new capacity: autonomy, the faculty possessed by living and intelligent beings to create their own laws. Drawing from cognitive science, in particular connectionism, the author offers a theoretical approach that can clarify the links between hybridization and autonomy around which the future orientation of art and culture is relying on.
dc.subjecthybridization
dc.subjectautonomy
dc.subjectconnectionism
dc.subjectartificial intelligence
dc.subjectartificial life
dc.date.issued2005-10


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