Harold Cohen: AARON

2024

Colorful abstract artwork with various shapes and lines, signed and dated '78.

Narrator: This is a lithograph, produced by hand, but rendering a computer-generated image. In the late 1970s, Cohen did a series of works that used this method to transfer AARON’s creations onto paper and then hand-colored them. It is typical of Cohen’s approach to translating AARON’s creations onto paper in the late 1970s.

Paul Cohen: To me, these always look like what you see through a microscope if you're looking in pond water, they look like little bacteria and various kinds of bugs and things. And they always to me have a two-dimensional look as if you're looking at a microscope slide from the top.

Narrator: Paul Cohen is the artist’s son, and an AI researcher.

Paul Cohen: For Harold, these were really important explorations of some of the rules of making evocative images. Those rules included things like the difference between figure and ground, the difference between open and closed shapes, how color interacts when it butts against another color, the use of white space, the addition of some mechanical aspects like the crosshatching.

And Harold was inspired here by two sources. One is Native American rock carving where the material has quite a lot to do with what gets carved. That is, there are natural constraints in the material that he was interested in emulating. The other source was children's drawing. And what you see in kids' drawings are these very early distinctions between open and closed things that look vaguely human-like, but not really human-like, things that look like potatoes that the kids say are actually a car, that kind of thing, right? So he got really interested in how children's drawing developed and you can see some of those influences in this picture.


Harold Cohen, Untitled [Amsterdam Suite], 1977/Jan'78. Colored pencil on lithograph, 22 × 28 3/4 in. (55.9 × 73 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Robert and Deborah Hendel 2023.151. © Harold Cohen Trust

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