well, thanks! No website....you know, I'm the first to admit that technically speaking, those 2 pics on the bookcovers may not qualify as art. I used that A.I. program from Google's skunkworks, Dremscopeapp (dot com) to make them...each pic took only like 5-10 passes (30-60 minutes) thru the various filters to get the final version. (PM me if you want to go the my pics on the site). The original of the thanka pic was that of an old asian painting I found online, and the original pic of the woman was something I found on the dreamscopeapp website ... I just elaborated further on them. Now, for example, just compare these 2 pics to Mr Salviadroid's recent efforts, and there's the difference between real art, and computer art. Not that computer art is inherently "worse".... apples and oranges? ... but it does lack the detail and soul that human-generated art has.
Nonetheless, you can get some beautiful results with the program....not just wildly psychedelic pictures like happened when the program first came out last year, but recently things are going in a great number of quasiartistic directions. And, while it's almost impossible to predict the outcome of running a pic thru a particular filter, the final results sometimes just blow your mind. Below are a few of these computer transformations I lucked out on:
1. Einstein on the day they discovered gravity waves (2 versions)
2. Mayan Shpongle
3. goldfish
4. indoor pool at the Hearst Mansion
5. Trichoceratops
6. tiger
7. fishing
8. Tim's Liftoff
life is full of deceit. When I see a piece of work that I like, however, I know it instantly regardless of where it came from. Thanks for the info.. fascinating the progress software developers have made.. even slightly moving. Feels like we are one step closer to a strange world
blue lunar night your work is amazing and though unique of itself very reminiscent to me of a few things. I think of those fuzzy black light posters we used to color in with all kinds of felt-tipped-neon and blaze, I think of those greatful dead posters my friend had on his wall when we were still just kids.
And more vaguely I am reminded of Bob Ross for the warmth that seems to almost radiate, and even Don Van Vliet - not the painter but the poet - in ways for the strange and wild knack for word choice -- substituted here by color.. and what color!!
Not very often I get that fuzzy sensation between the eyes, and usually it is a person's speech that does it, not images. Thanks for the share!
This is the cute jester I saw the first time I smoked DMT. He told me "Smile!" and poured love into me...he had a tiny little smirk and seemed extremely hyper-intelligent.
And his gender seemed to be a mix of male and female, but leaning more to the male side...it was really interesting!
He was my mischievous hyperspace guide.
...and for anyone wondering, all of the words are trigger words related to my first psychotic break. I wrote them all down so I could remember as many things as possible!
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