eCommons

 

Reas, C.E.B. (Casey)

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Digital access to this material is pending artist's approval. Materials may be viewed onsite at the Goldsen Archive, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Kroch Library, Cornell University.

In 1962 a young Umberto Eco wrote Opera Aperta (The Open Work) and described the new concept of a work of art which is defined as structural relationships between elements which can be modulated to make a series of distinct works. Individuals such as Cage, Calder, and Agam are examples of artists working in this manner contemporary to Eco's text. While all artworks are interpreted by the individual, he distinguished the interpretation involved in this approach to making art as fundamentally different from the interpretation of a musician playing from a score or a person looking at a painting. An open work presents a field of possibilities where the material form as well as the semantic content is open.

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    2008 Rockefeller New Media Fellow
    Reas, (Casey) C.E.B. (2009-06-09T18:14:32Z)
    My ongoing work explores the dialectical relationship between naturally evolved systems and those that are engineered and synthetic. The imagery evokes transformation and visualizes systems in motion and at rest. Equally embracing the qualitative nature of human perception and the quantitative rules that define digital culture, organic form emerges from precise mechanical structures.
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    2005 Rockefeller New Media Foundation Proposal
    Reas, Casey (2007-01-05T18:31:00Z)
    Processing is an open source software project written by artists, for the use of other artists. It's an entirely different way of thinking about computers as an artistic media. Processing is a programming language and environment created to teach fundamentals of computer programming within a visual context and to serve as a software sketchbook. Thousands of students, educators, and practitioners across five continents are involved in using the software. The website for the project, http://processing.org, serves as the communication hub and repository for examples, reference, and discourse. While it might not be obvious at first, we strongly believe Processing is a work of art, built as a comment on software culture and to promote software literacy within the arts community. It is not a commercial software venture, but is built in the spirit of community and openness.