Jon McCormack
Colourfield Lux
2017
Media: generative computer installation
Dimensions: 40 x 40 x 5 cm
Duration: infinite
About
Colourfield Lux is a new iteration of Colourfield (2009/2010), a generative ecosystem of artificial life agents that form symbiotic and stigmergic relationships based on their perceived colour.
Originally inspired by scientist and environmentalist James Lovelock’s Gaia hypothesis – that organisms and their environment form a synergistic, self-regulating and self-supporting complex system – Colourfield creates an ever-changing, miniature model world of relationships based on individual colour. Over long periods of evolution, the simulation displays many of the features of real ecosystems: symbiosis, co-dependency, mimicry and predator-prey relationships. In this new iteration of the work, real environmental dependencies are introduced into the virtual simulation. Light and colour are sensed from the environment immediately in front of the work, which feeds back into the virtual ecosystem. Changing colour forces the agents to become adaptive to both their simulated and real environments. The evolutionary adaptive nature of the simulation allows the work to display complex dynamics over long time periods, rewarding extended engagement. It generates a self-renewing, never-ending and never-repeating sequence through its internal logic that is directed by the environment in which it operates, and so is unique to any environment.
A circular screen surrounded by a black frame hangs on a wall like a discrete painting. However, this painting is always ‘looking back’ at the viewer and responding to them over time. Colourfield Lux forms a mediation on technology, the environment, the self, and the connection between them.
The Artist
Jon McCormack
Jon McCormack is an Australian-based artist working at the nexus of art, technology and society. His experimental practice is driven by an enduring interest and research in computing.