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Difference between revisions of "Michel, Cassandra, Google & the others"

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'''Michel, Cassandra, Google and the others'''
 
'''Michel, Cassandra, Google and the others'''
  
[https://algolit.net/images/7/76/Vernissage.jpg]
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[[File:Https://algolit.net/images/7/76/Vernissage.jpg|thumb|FAL, Michael Murtaugh, Brussels, Nov 21]]
  
 
Is it possible for algorithms to read a poetic story in an archive of news articles on digital surveillance, updated daily by the same person for fifteen years? Can algorithms read a similar story in the texts of a database as that which is told by its creator?
 
Is it possible for algorithms to read a poetic story in an archive of news articles on digital surveillance, updated daily by the same person for fifteen years? Can algorithms read a similar story in the texts of a database as that which is told by its creator?

Revision as of 14:27, 13 December 2021

Michel, Cassandra, Google and the others

File:Https://algolit.net/images/7/76/Vernissage.jpg
FAL, Michael Murtaugh, Brussels, Nov 21

Is it possible for algorithms to read a poetic story in an archive of news articles on digital surveillance, updated daily by the same person for fifteen years? Can algorithms read a similar story in the texts of a database as that which is told by its creator?

The members of the collective Algolit investigate these questions using e-traces, the database maintained by artist Michel Cleempoel. The answers are a source of inspiration for poetic and visual literary creations that take over Constant’s window.

If you want to see the installation at work, you can also browse to: http://etraces.une-anthologie.be/. The code of the installation can be found here: https://gitlab.constantvzw.org/algolit/michel-cassandra-google-et-les-autres


Opening: Thursday 25 November 2021 from 18:00 till 21:00. Workshop: Friday 14 January 2022 from 10:00 till 17:00.

This installation is made with the support of the Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles/Arts Numériques.