Harold Cohen: AARON

2024

An AI created stylized digital artwork of two abstract human figures, one in the foreground with a focus on the face, and another in the background.

Narrator: This projection, AARON KCAT, follows the earlier phase of plotter drawings and paintings.

David Lisbon: My name is David Lisbon. I'm the Curatorial Assistant who worked on the Harold Cohen: AARON Show with Christiane Paul.

Although these images seem sort of very similar, none of them are exactly the same. And so you're really seeing a software produce thousands and thousands of images in real time using not a set of images, but a set of rules. And that's why these images feel so similar.

Narrator: In this projection, we can see some of the differences between AARON and current text-to-image programs that draw on artificial neural networks. 

David Lisbon: One of the rules that Cohen implemented into the expert system is the five digits. And artificial neural networks can come close because they understand the concept of a hand as sort of a central piece with its multiple digits. But because the concept of digits isn't a finite thing for an artificial neural network, they work to approximate what they see across images. Whereas with Harold Cohen, every figure has five digits and sometimes those digits are exaggerated, but it shows you that the expert system is more robust when it comes to creating barriers. An artificial network is really good when it comes to creating a mean of a bunch of different images, but that mean doesn't have rules. And so that's how we see these kind of distorted, uncanny valley images that we think of when we think of AI in a contemporary sense


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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Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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