Curating The Week
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Curating The Week: Art’s Colonial Legacy, Prompt Principles, AI and Formulaic Art
“In the scales of knowledge, all the museums in the world will never weigh so much as one spark of human sympathy.” “Clearly state the requirements that the model must follow in order to produce content, in the form of the keywords, regulations, hint, or instructions.” “When a TikTok user in April posted an A.I.-generated Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Nostalgia, AI’s Influence On Programming, Making An Album A Day
• An essay on nostalgia. “Much as the pocket calculator long ago caused arithmetic skills to atrophy, newer technologies have made history ubiquitous instead of chronological, let alone explanatory. Mashups are now constructed with no real deliberateness but as part of a steady acquisitive spree through the videos that crowd our screens. We doomscroll and Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Superlinear Returns, Effects Of The Music Streaming Era, AI And Internet Searches, AI And Motivated Learning
“There are two ways work can compound. It can compound directly, in the sense that doing well in one cycle causes you to do better in the next. That happens for example when you’re building infrastructure, or growing an audience or brand. Or work can compound by teaching you, since learning compounds. This second case Continue reading
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Curating The Week: AI In Music Resources, How To Do Great Work
• AI In Music Resources. • A remarkable essay on how to do great work. “When in doubt, optimize for interestingness.” Continue reading
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Curating The Week: AI and Music, Flaneuring, Tim Hecker, Boredom, The Hum Of The Universe
• An article about AI and the music industry. “Human civilization is not just built on U2, Harry Potter, and Picasso but also on experimental artists, Grimms’ fairy tales, and the Amen break. There are longtime calls for legislators to impose a compulsory license on music sampling, just as fashion designers have proposed similar schemes Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Blur, Imperfections, The Time Course Of Creativity
• An article about optical blur (which has me thinking about blurring in music). “There are still artists for whom the purity of optical blur—a tiny depth of field with a single detail picked out, or total lack of focus across the composition—says something important about the limits of perception, or usefully frustrates a viewer’s Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Jaron Lanier On A.I., Re-Listening, Bagpipe Cover Songs
• Essential reading on A.I. by Jaron Lanier. “The new programs mash up work done by human minds. What’s innovative is that the mashup process has become guided and constrained, so that the results are usable and often striking. This is a significant achievement and worth celebrating—but it can be thought of as illuminating previously Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Peter Doig On Artworks Taking Time To Resolve, Lo-fi Aesthetics, ChatGPT
• An interview with Peter Doig. “Paintings have taken a lot of time to resolve, but I would keep them rather than abandon them—because I would think the elements were worth pursuing.” “I don’t really like the term ‘magical realism.’ You know, the spaces that exist within the painting are really spaces that have to Continue reading
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Curating The Week: Terry Riley, John Luther Adams, The Universality Of Music
• An interview with Terry Riley. “Beginnings and endings aren’t that important, because you’re just tuning in to a sound current. Music is the involvement of the human spirit with sound. If you know what you’re doing in the arts, then you’re doing it wrong. That’s a pretty good maxim. I think before Indian classical Continue reading
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Curating The Week: ChatGPT, AI and Art, Dumbed-Down Culture, Bach
• A story about interacting with ChatGPT (which also speaks to creativity). “On a conceptual level, these large language models–these prediction machines–they deal with a certain amount of uncertainty. When you do down one of these ‘hallucinatory chains’–if you ask the model something that it hallucinates an answer to and you keep going, you keep Continue reading
