Some humans believe that they are nothing more than a composition of stardust and space matter. Yet, when we think of space matter, hard, rocky substances often come to mind. A Barcelona-based artist, Sergio Albiac, has conceivably changed that view. Taking user-submitted photos, he turns flesh and blood humans into cosmic beings with his recent project, "Stardust Portraits." (Sergio Albiac)
In his latest project, willing participants send photos to Albiac, who runs it through his specially designed software. Then, an algorithm chooses two cosmic images captured in space with the Hubble Telescope and morphs them into a collage, containing both human and planetary features, including stars and galaxies. (Sergio Albiac)
Known for creating generative portraits, Albiac uses computers as a medium, just as other artists use paper and pencils. Despite the fact his artwork is computer-generated, he stresses that there is a human aspect when creating such a piece. (Sergio Albiac)
When coding a generative sketch -- like this, one of his other projects -- Albiac introduces control by introducing factors that govern the sketching action, as well as a certain degree of randomness within the code. He then selects certain outputs, and paints the canvas using the selected generative images as a starting point, he explains on his website. By doing so, he is exploring a dialogue between control/randomness and machine/human interaction. (Sergio Albiac)
Ultimately, Albiac wants to viewers to see alternative answers to his or her questions or better, totally new doubts. Im interested in the effect of chance on human experience, he said. Generative art, which basically outsources artistic and aesthetic decisions, is a fascinating approach to express these kind of concepts. (Sergio Albiac)
Inspired by the formation of atomic nuclei from preexisting cosmic matter, or nucleosynthesis, humans are believed to be novel combinations of cosmic stardust. It could be argued that the whole universe is the biggest running generative art installation today, Albiac explains on his website. (Sergio Albiac)
Having created around 1,250 portraits, eventually, hed like to produce upwards of 100,000, he has said. Still, he hopes that using the computer will forever cement his impression on art. (Sergio Albiac)
Life is finite. Creativity isn't, he muses on his website. An artist has the potential to create infinite artworks but only some of them will see the light due to the constraint of time. (Sergio Albiac)