Autopoiesis

Ken E. Rinaldo

Autopoiesis ,
Co-workers & Funding
Documents
  • Autopoiesis
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Description
Autopoiesis, is a robotic sculpture installation commissioned by the Kiasma Museum in Helsinki, Finland as part of Outoaly, the Alien Intelligence Exhibition curated by Erkki Huhtamo, 2000. It consists of fifteen robotic sound sculptures that interact with the public and modify their behaviors over time. These behaviors change based on feedback from infrared sensors, the presence of the participant/viewers in the exhibition and the communication between each separate sculpture. This series of robotic sculptures talk with each other through a computer network and audible telephone tones, which are a musical language for the group. Autopoiesis is "self making", a characteristic of all living systems which was defined and refined by Francisco Varella and Humberto Maturana. The interactivity engages the viewer/participant who in turn, effects the system's evolution and emergence. This creates a system evolution as well as an overall group sculptural aesthetic. Autopoiesis breaks out of standard interfaces (mouse) and playback methodologies (CRT) and presents an interactive environment, which is immersive, detailed and able to evolve in real time by utilizing feedback and interaction from audience/participant members.
(Kenneth E. Rinaldo)
Keywords
  • aesthetics
    • installation-based
  • genres
    • bioart
    • robotic art
  • subjects
    • Art and Science
      • artificial intelligence (science discipline)
    • Media and Communication
      • communication
    • Technology and Innovation
      • robots
Technology & Material
Bibliography