Snapshot of Anna Ridler's algorithm 'learning' what tulips look like for Mosaic Virus.

Barbican Centre and Anna Ridler2019/2019

Barbican Centre

Barbican Centre
London, United Kingdom

In Mosaic Virus, Anna Ridler uses a data set of photographed tulips to create a video work generated by an AI, which shows a tulip blooming.

Anna Ridler is an artist and researcher who lives and works in London. She has degrees from the Royal College of Art, Oxford University, University of Arts London and have shown at a variety of cultural institutions and galleries including Ars Electronica, Sheffield Documentary Festival, Leverhulme Centre for Future Intelligence, Tate Modern and the V&A. She is interested in working with collections of information or data, particularly self-generated data sets, to create new and unusual narratives in a variety of mediums, and how new technologies, such as machine learning, can be used to translate them to an audience. She is currently working with and researching the creative potential of machine learning, and how it relates to drawing and painting
The Barbican's AI: More than Human (16 May-26 Aug 2019) is an major exhibition exploring creative and scientific developments in artificial intelligence demonstrating its potential to revolutionise our lives. Part of Life Rewired, the Barbican's 2019 season exploring what it means to be human when technology is changing everything.

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  • Title: Snapshot of Anna Ridler's algorithm 'learning' what tulips look like for Mosaic Virus.
  • Creator: Barbican Centre, Anna Ridler
  • Date: 2019/2019
  • Type: Photography
  • Rights: Anna Ridler
  • Medium: Photography
Barbican Centre

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