KEVIN ABOSCH

CHF 15,000.00

НАЛ (Cash) (2020) / generative photograph from “Nascent Space” (2019-2020) 
archival pigment print on Hahnemühle baryta
17 x 22 in (43.2 x 55.9 cm)
unique 1/1 + AP (for museum exhibitions only)

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НАЛ (Cash) (2020) / generative photograph from “Nascent Space” (2019-2020) 
archival pigment print on Hahnemühle baryta
17 x 22 in (43.2 x 55.9 cm)
unique 1/1 + AP (for museum exhibitions only)

НАЛ (Cash) (2020) / generative photograph from “Nascent Space” (2019-2020) 
archival pigment print on Hahnemühle baryta
17 x 22 in (43.2 x 55.9 cm)
unique 1/1 + AP (for museum exhibitions only)

The scientific method moves from a hypothesis to an experiment and ultimately yields a result. It’s understandable that scientists and technologists are result-driven. It is the result that yields the empirical data that speaks to an experiment’s success and failure. Indeed, the very reputation of the scientist and the technologist is a function of presenting results to their peers. // My own interest in the scientific method has waned over the years. Empirical data can be of great practical use, but as an artist I’m more interested in process, ritual and insights gleaned long before the result. With respect to deep-learning algorithms, I force complications by limiting and corrupting the input data. What would ordinarily comprise the latent space is sublimated into what I call “nascent space.” Nascent space exists within a gaussian, or normal distribution of data but holds the prima materia from which discovery and creation are born. It is in this nascent space that I find truths not necessarily apparent within results. - KEVIN ABOSCH