[ISEA2015] Paper: Shannon Mcmullen & Fabian Winkler – The Algorithmic Gardener: Tales of Nature and Code

Abstract (Short paper)

Keywords: Critical gardening, Taurus dexterous robot, weeds, gardens, robots, new media art, nature, technology, narratives, culture, algorithms, translation, metaphors, visual culture, synthetic vision.

The Algorithmic Gardener – Tales of Nature and Code is a collaborative new media installation that is currently being developed by the authors and Juan Wachs, a roboticist and computer vision expert in Purdue University’s School of Industrial Engineering. Using a two-armed robot with stereoscopic vision capabilities programmed to autonomously identify and pull weeds, the project investigates an emerging visual culture defined by synthetic ways of seeing and the material realities such seeing might produce. Conceptually, The Algorithmic Gardener focuses on the translation of a cultural concept, that of weeds, and its many connotations (from agriculture, to real estate to social contexts) into robotic action code. These algorithms, executed by the robot, merge culture and technology into tangible outcomes: a series of ideologically-laden micro-gardens that can activate agricultural, political and environmental narratives, metaphors and materializations for 21st century relationships between nature and technology.

  • Shannon McMullen & Fabian Winkler are interdisciplinary artists and researchers combining their backgrounds in new media art and sociology to produce collaborative artworks that often combine sound, image, code and installation to create temporary
    new social spaces and investigate relations between nature and technology (gardensandmachines.com). Their work as been shown internationally at venues such as Art Center Nabi, Seoul, Korea; ZKM Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany and the Spark Festival, Minneapolis, USA. Shannon McMullen is an Assistant Professor with a joint faculty appointment in Art and Design and American Studies at Purdue University. Fabian Winkler is an Associate Professor of Art and Design. Both teach in the Patti and Rusty Rueff School of Visual and Performing Arts at Purdue University in West Lafayette, IN, USA, where they co-direct the area of Electronic and Time-Based Art.

Full text (PDF) p. 529-532