Harold Cohen: AARON

2024

Colorful abstract painting of two stylized figures with disjointed limbs against a vibrant, multicolored background.

Narrator: In Stephanie & Friend, we see evidence of the thinking behind AARON

Paul Cohen: Very, very early in Harold's career, he became convinced that a machine would never generate an image that looked like it had human intention behind it unless that line looked like it was made by a human. 

Narrator: Paul Cohen.

Paul Cohen: So there are no straight lines, there are no Bézier curves, there are no logarithmic spirals. What there is this really rather marvelous algorithm for making a line that looks like it was drawn by a person.

Narrator: But to make images like this one, Cohen had to do more than think about how to represent a believable human. He had to consider the nature of representation itself. Christiane Paul. 

Christiane Paul: Any kind of software created specifically for the purpose of art making would need to have a certain kind of knowledge of the world and of the objects in it. It would need to understand how these objects are being placed and what basic rules of representation are, and this requires a procedural kind of evolution of rules and formula.

Paul Cohen: One thing that Harold had to deal with was the whole issue of occlusion. How do you put people or plants in a really complicated scene like this and make sure that all of the occlusion is done right? So you want a human and you want a human to be waving and you want the human's arm to be in front of the plant, but you also want a branch of the plant to be in front of the human. It turns out that's not an easy thing to do to draw a picture so that you don't mess any of that up, especially when it's a really complicated picture. 

Narrator: Cohen essentially had to teach AARON to handle these complexities.

Paul Cohen: So basically what you have to do is you have to draw the picture, and Harold used to say, "You have to draw the picture from front to back," Everything that you see in front has to be drawn first and you fill in the back as you go backwards into this third dimension.


Harold Cohen, Stephanie & Friend, 1993. Acrylic and plotter pen on canvas, 54 × 78 1/4 in. (137.2 × 198.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Robert and Deborah Hendel 2023.144. © Harold Cohen Trust

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