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Computing Machines Drawing Hands
12024-02-06T21:30:28+00:00Julia Teran9aca9c408841ff28b321d7128a1e5c918a151e1d601In 1948, MC Escher drew the surreal piece, “Drawing Hands,” in which a sketch of two hands leap out of a page to complete the drawing, both being created by and the creator of the other. The cyclic nature of Escher’s work is realized in the fascinating synthesis between human and artificial intelligence. In 1943, McCulloch and Pitts created the first neural network, the technology behind the AI boom of today, after deriving inspiration from biology. Yet it took until the 2020’s for the work created by machines to be comparable to that of humans. Now, the generative power of AI can truly augment the creative works of mankind. After being trained on much of the internet, machines can produce work that humans find artistic value in, leading to new inspiration for future works. This symbiosis allowed for this piece to come into existence. After generating 100 images in DALL-E 3 with a prompt about a mechanistic interpretation of MC Escher’s “Drawing Hands,” the photos were compiled and overlaid with the original piece. Through the combination of human and machine, more interesting work can be realized than either can accomplish alone.2024-02-06T21:30:28+00:0008Jon WillcuttCase Western Reserve UniversityJulia Teran9aca9c408841ff28b321d7128a1e5c918a151e1d
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12024-02-02T20:22:30+00:00Daniela Solomone316041929e7cb3504341dbd1e9eb2f7bd821a142024 Case Western Reserve University SubmissionsDaniela Solomon7structured_gallery2024-03-19T17:58:24+00:00Daniela Solomone316041929e7cb3504341dbd1e9eb2f7bd821a14
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12024-02-06T15:12:10+00:00Daniela Solomone316041929e7cb3504341dbd1e9eb2f7bd821a14Case Western Reserve UniversityDaniela Solomon6gallery2024-03-19T15:38:38+00:00Daniela Solomone316041929e7cb3504341dbd1e9eb2f7bd821a14