{"id":208031,"date":"2023-11-27T15:42:10","date_gmt":"2023-11-27T20:42:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/art-and-design\/?p=208031"},"modified":"2023-11-27T15:42:10","modified_gmt":"2023-11-27T20:42:10","slug":"dr-charlotte-kent-wins-an-unrestricted-grant-from-googles-artists-and-machine-intelligence-section-for-arts-agency-and-automation-and-delivers-more-engaging-talks-at-several-events","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/art-and-design\/2023\/11\/27\/dr-charlotte-kent-wins-an-unrestricted-grant-from-googles-artists-and-machine-intelligence-section-for-arts-agency-and-automation-and-delivers-more-engaging-talks-at-several-events\/","title":{"rendered":"Dr. Charlotte Kent wins an unrestricted grant from Google\u2019s Artists and Machine Intelligence section for Arts, Agency, and Automation and delivers more engaging talks at several events"},"content":{"rendered":"

Dr. Charlotte Kent<\/a> secured a $20,000 unrestricted grant from Google’s Artists and Machine Intelligence division for her work in Arts, Agency, and Automation. The Google grant, established in 2017, has awarded a total of 19 grants from 2017 to 2022. Over the last three years, they have distributed 5 grants annually. Charlotte Kent was among the exclusive group of 24 recipients since the grant’s inception.<\/p>\n

Charlotte Kent discusses the impact of the grant on her work, expressing gratitude for the opportunity and highlighting the innovative aspects of her projects.<\/p>\n

\u201cEven prior to the conversation surrounding artificial intelligence in generative systems, there was confusion in art surrounding the notion of agency. Since Marcel Duchamp proclaimed the ready-made as art, artists have distanced themselves through various means from the creation of an object. Chance operations appear in Dada, surrealism, and Fluxus, most prominently, but also in elements of performance, video, and installation art as a way of mitigating the artist as the sole origin of art production. The question of autonomy arose in art theory and came to prominence amidst this shift with claims of the death of the author. Early computer art embraced algorithmic outputs, often using plotters and kinetic machines to manifest emergent forms. At the same time, rule-based art got popularized within Conceptualism as eliminating artistic intention. Net-art cultivated webcams and hyperlinking to present the unexpected and a kind of choose-your-own-adventure interactivity that gaming then emphasized. Now, with the popularity of code-based generative art and machine learning generated outputs, many artists celebrate the uncertain agency in their creativity. But, what is agency? Even in this brief description, other terms like autonomy, intention, authorship, generative, emergence, and creativity appear, further confounding clarity. As popular media decry the mass-manufacture of art that obviates any certain originating point, and legal scholars file copyright and intellectual property concerns, artists present an array of ideas about their practices using \u201cartificial intelligence\u201d systems.<\/p>\n

Recognizing the need for some articulation of agency and its related terms within contemporary art practice with automated systems, I propose to assess the impact of different disciplinary notions of agency as they relate to art practice and theory as well as articulate the cultural differences conceiving agency between two artists located in Los Angeles, California and Tokyo, Japan — nations respectively known for their individualist and collectivist cultures.\u201d – Dr. Charlotte Kent<\/p>\n

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