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Brooklyn-based new-media artist John Klima explores connections between the virtual and the real through his interactive digital art. His browser Ear h was included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of recent American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, USA. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1918. , and his recent work, Context Breeder, can be viewed at www.rhizome rhizome (rī`zōm) or rootstock, fleshy, creeping underground stem by means of which certain plants propagate themselves. Buds that form at the joints produce new shoots. .org

We are still very much in a "Nickelodeon" stage of computing, searching for ways to expand our infant technology. The sites below contain Java applets--small pieces of powerful software that extend the capabilities of a Web browser The program that serves as your front end to the Web on the Internet. In order to view a site, you type its address (URL) into the browser's Location field; for example, www.computerlanguage.com, and the home page of that site is downloaded to you.  far beyond static text and image--that demonstrate behavioral algorithms of the sort typically employed in the computer gaming industry to create increasingly wily adversaries. None of them is an animation in the classic sense of the flip book. Rather, the animator creates a set and "actors," establishes parameters for their behavior, and determines the physics of their little universe. The graphics are all generated based on rules that produce an infinite number infinite number

a number so large as to be uncountable. Represented by 8, frequently obtained by 'dividing' by zero.
 of outcomes. These devices have been employed to great effect in computer games like The Sims and in Hollywood blockbusters like Jurassic Park and Titanic, but they're also increasingly subjected to serious aesthetic investigation by digital artists like Mark Napier Mark Napier can refer to more than one person:
  • Mark Napier (historian), a Scottish historian
  • Mark Napier (ice hockey), a professional ice hockey player
  • Mark Napier (artist), an American internet artist
  • [Mark Napier](water purification specialist-Napiertech.com)
, Golan Levin Golan Levin (born 1972) is a new media artist, composer, performer and engineer interested in developing artifacts and events which explore supple new modes of reactive expression. , John Simon John Simon could refer to:
  • John Simon aka Poet, main character of Rising Stars by J. Michael Straczynski.
  • John Allsebrook Simon, 1st Viscount Simon, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain 1940–45;
  • Several of his descendants who held the title of Viscount Simon;
 Jr., and me. My guess is that ar tists of the future will look to these as examples of the "new art"--however that ultimately manifests itself.

Steering Behaviors for Autonomous Characters

www.red3d.com/cwr/steer

My studio is in Williamsburg, Brooklyn Coordinates:

Williamsburg is a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, bordering Greenpoint, Bed-Stuy, and Bushwick.
, and I frequently transfer from the F to the J train at Delancey Street Delancey Street is one of the main thoroughfares of Manhattan's Lower East Side, running east from the Bowery to connect to the Williamsburg Bridge to Brooklyn.

Businesses range from delis to check-cashing stores to bars.
. The queuing-behavior model developed by Craig Reynolds Craig Reynolds can refer to:
  • Craig Reynolds (computer graphics) - a computer graphics artist
  • Craig Reynolds (baseball player) - a baseball player
  • Craig Reynolds (actor) - (1907-1949)
 at this site perfectly reflects the mad dash as the subway doors open and a flood of commuters race into the narrow connecting passage. Reynolds has compiled a collection of autonomous steering behaviors as well as links to additional websites devoted to behavioral artificial intelligence. Rather than use representations of humans, Reynolds creates "characters" of mathematical significance, comprised of visual elements--sticks and balls and swinging things--that indicate the inner workings of the code.

Computer Visualization of the Marine Environment

www.ecovis.org/schooling.htm

This three-dimensional example of Reynolds's flocking algorithm, created by William C. Graham Jr., takes Web surfers to a virtual sea, illustrating models of fish schooling behavior and predator-prey movement patterns. The site provides a useful explanation of how such behaviors work. The applet, which is more graphically rich than Reynolds's, requires the Java 2 plug-in; the site can help you download it.

Particle World

www.lfm.lluse/~freka/particleworld

While steering behaviors represent an artificially intelligent system on the macro level, this extensive particle simulator reproduces intelligent locomotion locomotion

Any of various animal movements that result in progression from one place to another. Locomotion is classified as either appendicular (accomplished by special appendages) or axial (achieved by changing the body shape).
 on the micro level. You can throw things at your particle, manipulate the electrostatic forces and air resistance around it, and put it into orbit. Once you're happy with the environment you've constructed, upload it to a common server so other viewers can experience your particle world.

Mirek's Java Cellebration

www.mirekw.com/ca/mjcell/mjcell.html

If particle physics demonstrates locomotion, then Cellular Automata (CA) go under the skin to represent an organism's internal functions: cell reproduction, viral spreading, and so on. Pioneered decades ago by scientists John Walker and Rudy Rucker, among others, CA operate under a set of simple rules that result in a graphic output strikingly similar to self-organizing systems in nature--think crystalline structures, like salt. Mirek Wojtowicz's compendium CA, with more than 300 sets of rules and 1,400 patterns, is one of the most extensive of its kind on the Web. You select the rules and an initial dispersal pattern (or make your own), and let it rip.

The Computational Beauty of Nature

mitpress.mit.edu/books/flaoh/cbnhtml/java.html

For further explorations in natural computing (no, it's not an oxymoron), MIT published The Computational Beauty of Nature (1999) with this companion website of Java applications. Here visitors can play with a variety of classic fractal, CA, behavioral, and chaos algorithms all in one neat and tidy package. Leave it to MIT to make order out of chaos.

Visit www.artforum.com for links to Hotlist A listing of the best of something. It typically refers to the most popular Web sites.

(World-Wide Web) hotlist - (From hypertext "hot spot") A document on the World-Wide Web or a user's browser configuration file containing hypertext links, often unorganised and
 websites.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:digital art
Author:Klima, John
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2002
Words:675
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