Every Icon
http://www.numeral.com/appletsoftware
/eicon.html
Description
Can a machine produce every possible image?
What are the limits of this kind of automation?
Is it possible to practice image making by exploring all of image-space
using a computer rather than by recording from the world around us? What
does it mean that one may discover visual imagery so detached from "nature"?
Every Icon progresses
by counting. Starting with an image where every grid element is white,
the software displays combinations of black and white elements, proceeding
toward an image where every element is black. In contrast to presenting
a single image as an intentional sign, Every Icon presents all possibilities.
The grid contains
all possible images. Any change in the starting conditions, such as the
size of the grid or the color of the element,
determines an entirely different set of possible images. When Every Icon
begins, the image changes rapidly. Yet the progression of the elements
across the grid seems to take longer and longer. How long until recognizable
images appear? Try several hundred trillion years. The total number of
black and white icons in a 32 X 32 grid is:
1.8 X 10308(a billion is 109).
Though, for example, at a rate of 100 icons per second (on a typical desktop
computer), it will take only 1.36 years to display all variations of the
first line of the grid, the second line takes an exponentially longer
5.85 billion years to complete.
While Every Icon is resolved conceptually, it is unresolvable in practice.
In some ways the theoretical possibilities outdistance the time scales
of both evolution and imagination.
It posits a representational system where computational promise is intricately
linked to extraordinary duration and momentary sensation.
|