Harold Cohen: AARON

Feb 3–May 19, 2024


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AARON’s Beginnings 

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After conceiving AARON at the University of California, San Diego, in the late 1960s, Harold Cohen took the program to new levels at Stanford University’s Artificial Intelligence Lab from 1973 to 1975. From the start, AARON was intended to be a program about artmaking and the nature of representation itself; it functions as a symbol manipulator. AARON combines formal rules—such as starting in the foreground of a drawing and moving to the background—with random events to generate elements like curved lines, straight lines, or closed figures. These emerging shapes are advanced further based on feedback inside the system that evaluates the “success” of a composition. Cohen seeded AARON’s code with understanding of external objects in the world (such as their size, shape, and position), which remains accessible in its long-term memory as needed. He also encoded knowledge about the internal, procedural paradigm of an artist’s drawing strategies. When creating a drawing, AARON thus would strive to satisfy certain criteria: distributing small and large items—some close together, others farther apart—with more or less detail to achieve a sense of dimension.

AARON evolved in several phases. It began with simple, evocative shapes that grew more complex to achieve a rudimentary sense of perspective. Cohen was inspired by the drawing process of children, who start by simply linking shapes and squiggles and move on to outlining connected forms. He also was influenced by a 1973 visit to the petroglyphs of Chalfant Valley, California, which he saw as demonstrating how a system of marks begins to function as an image.

Active plotters

Two robotic drawing machines sketching on paper atop tables in a room with wooden flooring.
Two robotic drawing machines sketching on paper atop tables in a room with wooden flooring.

Installation view of Harold Cohen: AARON (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, February 3–May 19, 2024). From left to right: Active plotters drawing images from different periods of the AARON software. Plotter fabricated by Bantam Tools; courtesy Bre Pettis. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

The plotters are modernized re-creations of Harold Cohen’s early drawing machines. Constructed specifically for this exhibition, they draw images from different periods of the AARON software. The paper sizes and line widths of the plotter pens are consistent with those originally used by Cohen. Selected drawings produced during the run of the exhibition will be regularly mounted on the walls. 

The abstract drawings represent the earliest phase of Cohen’s work on his artmaking software and were first shown in 1972 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The code has been reconstructed from Cohen’s notebooks and recoded in the more recent Python language. The work titled Mazes is produced by Cohen’s “ freehand line algorithm” and generates colored lines that partition the space of the paper without ever enclosing any part of it. 

These early abstract visuals contrast with drawings from AARON’s figurative phase (starting roughly in the mid-1980s) that Cohen plotted in black and white. The images are produced by the KCAT AARON software, which is on view in the adjacent gallery as a projection.

On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whathappensontheship.space/artport

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