Harold Cohen: AARON

2024

A person near a small table with flowers and a red background created out of lines without curves.

Narrator: Welcome to Harold Cohen: AARON. Cohen imagined an artmaking software in the late 1960s, which he named AARON in 1973. It was the first Artificial Intelligence program designed for making art.

Christiane Paul: I'm Christiane Paul, Curator of Digital Art at the Whitney Museum. What distinguishes Harold Cohen's work is that he tried to get to the core of art making itself, and what it means to be an artist by creating a software for making art and thereby also generating an abstraction of what the artistic process is like. So, this obviously is a remarkable and extremely ambitious endeavor. It is almost impossible and Harold devoted his life to it.

David Lisbon: Hi, my name is David Lisbon. I'm the Curatorial Assistant who worked on the Harold Cohen: AARON Show with Christiane Paul. AARON is a software that progressed over time to envelop more and more of what Cohen imagined human touch to be across analog mediums, but also across the digital screen.

Narrator: In the past year or so, text-to-image programs like DALL-E, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion have been in the news a lot.

Christiane Paul: Cohen's AARON represents an earlier phase of artificial intelligence practice, when AI systems were more symbolic, meaning they were manipulating their own formulas and rules. And today's AI programs are more statistical, meaning they are trained on and learning from existing data sets. For example, specific painting styles, such as surrealism. 

Narrator: Cohen’s rules weren’t just intended to create images—their aim was to create art, with expressive qualities and aesthetic value. Cohen had already achieved success as an abstract painter in 1960s London. He began experimenting with coding as a means of making art in 1968, when he began teaching at the University of California, San Diego. Some of his earlier works are on view in the room to the right, through the door by the window. 


Harold Cohen, AARON KCAT, 2001. Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software. Dimensions variable. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20. © Harold Cohen Trust

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