Sometime I wonder what Picasso or better Andy Warhol would
have created had they been born in the age of computers. As for Picasso his
incredible production and constant reinvention would have probably been even greater; creativity wise, a
synthetic digital brush would have been for Picasso, a magical creative wand
that his playful hand would have embraced without reservation. Warhol whose
paintings were essentially centered on silk-screening is an interesting example
to analyze. I remember working with Rupert Smith who was his latest,
silk-screening atelier in Tribeca, Andy would be presented ideas of portraits
based on his favorite colors schemes by Rupert and this collaborative work was
the alternative to using Photoshop and digital printers that really did not
exist yet at the level they are today. Warhol with his constant use of silk
screening did in fact rarely touched a brush or a canvas in the traditional
sense of art, his favorite medium was the precursor of the digital printer.
So the evolution of painters from brushes, canvas to
silk-screening where a great number of post war artists expressed themselves
find itself challenged by a digital world that today explodes the notion of
paintings. At MIT in Boston Massachusetts, the digital lab had for many years
defined the role of computers in creativity, from animation to paintings. Some
of these experiments dated as far as 40 years ago. Today we are witnessing an
incredible cross-pollination between new media and old-fashioned painting
techniques. I have for my part found a new source of inspiration in the
diversity of tools offered by the digital world. I embrace this medium without
reservation always hoping for new revelations. By mixing my mind, fingers with
Intel processors, my imagination is soaring to new heights, I did not know
existed, where only a brush and empty white canvas where the only norms , today’s technology offers me and my fellow artists substrates and
platforms of expressions that keep our creative flow running towards new shapes,
forms and colors constantly pushing the frontiers of our imagination. My next
exhibition opening in May 5 at the BDG gallery in Chelsea will includes a
diverse visual experience based on this research both traditional and digital.
hi Ron. With a MAC the Maestro would not have been the Maestro. This is My Humble Opinion, FWIW
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