We have machines that can recognize faces and machines that can draw. Now, thanks to scientist/engineer/artist Patrick Tresset, we have robots that do both -- look at your face and then draw a portrait while you wait. One catch, ...READ»
We're not really sure where to begin with this art work, except to say that it makes Salvador Dali’s paintings look comparatively sane (not to mention boring).
The artist is Australian Jonathan Zawada, who took the world’s most ...READ»
It's rare to find a drawing app that can be as sloppy as fingerpainting while still offering a dizzying array of precise parameters to play with as well. But Anna Oguienko's WURM fits that bill and then some. Imagine MIT's Singing ...READ»
Artists can turn anything into a creative medium: wood chips, old bikes, you name it. Louise Despont's substrate of choice? Delicate sheets of antique ledger paper that turn-of-the-century organizations like "The Standard Fire ...READ»
New York artist Ryan McGinness has put together a series of free-associative drawings that consider the elegance (and perhaps oddity) of the female form -- and to remind us why he's considered one of the most inventive brains in New ...READ»
Ten One is a New Jersey-based firm that deals with accessories for smartphones and tablets, with the odd bit of software thrown in for good measure. One of their products is the Pogo stylus, which can't have Steve Jobs that ...READ»
Since February 2006, Kate Bingaman-Burt has created daily drawings of items she has purchased. A new book Obsessive Consumption: What Did You Buy Today includes hundreds of her possessions--including the credit card statements ...READ»
Every smartphone user has tinkered with a drawing app--it's a tiny jolt of fun, and it's somehow satisfying to see virtual paint spattering on a touchscreen beneath the fingertip. But is it art? Absolutely. But don't take my word ...READ»