Peripheral vision : Bell Labs, the S-C 4020, and the origins of computer art / Zabet Patterson.
2015
N7433.8 .P378 2015eb
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Details
Title
Peripheral vision : Bell Labs, the S-C 4020, and the origins of computer art / Zabet Patterson.
Author
ISBN
9780262330060 (electronic bk.)
0262330067 (electronic bk.)
9780262029520
0262029529
0262330067 (electronic bk.)
9780262029520
0262029529
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2015]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xviii, 133 pages) : illustrations.
Call Number
N7433.8 .P378 2015eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
776
Summary
"In 1959, the electronics manufacturer Stromberg-Carlson produced the S-C 4020, a device that allowed mainframe computers to present and preserve images. In the mainframe era, the output of text and image was quite literally peripheral; the S-C 4020 -- a strange and elaborate apparatus, with a cathode ray screen, a tape deck, a buffer unit, a film camera, and a photo-paper camera -- produced most of the computer graphics of the late 1950s and early 1960s. At Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, the S-C 4020 became a crucial part of ongoing encounters among art, science, and technology. In this book, Zabet Patterson examines the extraordinary uses to which the Bell Labs SC-2040 was put between 1961 and 1972, exploring a series of early computer art projects shaped by the special computational affordances of the S-C 4020. The S-C 4020 produced tabular data, graph plotting and design drawings, grid projections, and drawings of axes and vectors; it made previously impossible visualizations possible. Among the works Patterson describes are E.E. Zajac's short film of an orbiting satellite, which drew on the machine's graphic capacities as well as the mainframe's calculations; a groundbreaking exhibit of "computer generated pictures" by B??la Julesz and Michael Noll, two scientists interested in visualization; animations by Kenneth Knowlton and the Bell Labs artist-in-residence Stan VanDerBeek; and Lillian Schwartz's "cybernetic" film Pixillation. Arguing for the centrality of a peripheral, Patterson makes a case for considering computational systems not simply as machines but in their cultural and historical context."
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