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  1. Poetry Chains and Collocations

    Poetry Chains and Collocation Nets are two intertwined projects that investigate the 1955 edition of Emily Dickinson’s complete poems through various interactive animated navigations of collocated words. As such, they perform what Samuels and McGann term “experimental analyses.” Each of the visualizations displays a different presentation of her work. Poetry Chains begins with two words and attempts to find a chain of words in a specified number of lines that connects them together, displaying them as it succeeds. Collocation Nets begins with a single word centered in the middle of the screen. When the user selects the word, a random selected of its collocations pops out in a surrounding ring. Any of those words can be selected, which results in collocations of that word appearing. A user can toggle into an ambient mode of this visualization that automatically eventually cycles through all of the words, forever. These visualizations offer a continuously dynamic remapping of Dickinson’s work.

    Hannah Ackermans - 08.09.2015 - 10:10

  2. Polarities

    This kinetic poetry generator is based on the texts by two polar authors, husband and wife, Anna Akhmatova and Nikolay Gumilev. Letters from their decomposed texts are moving according to the magnetic field principle like positively and negatively charged particles. The work is produced by two authors, a computer programmer and an artist, who are also husband and wife.

    (Source: ELO 2015 catalog)

    Hannah Ackermans - 12.09.2015 - 11:29

  3. JanusNode

    JanusNode is a user-configurable dynamic textual projective surface. It can create original texts using a rule-based system or can morph your texts using Markov chaining and various other techniques. It has been described (albeit generously) as 'Photoshop for text'.

    JanusNode is the direct descendent of an old program called 'McPoet' that I started writing in the mid-80s. The program has been in sporadic but continuous development since that time. I do not intend to definitively stop working on it in my lifetime.

    (Source: http://janusnode.com/)

    Hannah Ackermans - 21.02.2016 - 08:50

  4. The US political poetry generator

    American politics isn’t usually poetic, but what happens when you throw in actual poetry? Behold, our political poetry generator. We’ve gathered the transcripts of the latest Republican and Democratic presidential debates, and programmatically stirred in hundreds of lines of classic poetry. Pick a candidate, poet, and style below, and see what beauty you can generate.

    Hannah Ackermans - 12.04.2016 - 10:06

  5. Pigeon Forge

    "Pigeon Forge" is a poetry generator which remixes Nick Montfort's "Taroko Gorge" -- a nature poem generator built in javascript. Whalen modified the code and substituted the language of Montfort's work to create this poetry generator, which forms a picture of an urban landscape, it's green areas and city life.

    Guro Prestegard - 20.09.2016 - 15:55

  6. Take Ogre

    Take Ogre is a poetry generator which remixes Nick Montfort's Taroko Gorge--a nature poem generator built in javascript. McNamara modified the code and substituted the language of Montfort's work to create this poetry generator, which describes a game-world with kings, queens, ogres and players as part of the poem. In addition to changing the words of the original poem, McNamara also has changed the background to a home-environment.

    Guro Prestegard - 22.09.2016 - 12:23

  7. Wandering through Taroko Gorge

    "Wandering through Taroko Gorge" is a remix of Nick Montfort's "Taroko Gorge", a JavaScript poetry generator. Originating out of a class project in which we were asked to investigate and document how Montfort's creation functioned, this version adds components like hidden illuminations, music generated by the poem using the computer's built in cyclotron, and the ability to add to the poem on the fly. Each of these additions are designed to mimic our investigative process, and help those who have a similar project accomplish the same task of documentation more quickly.

    (Source: ELC 3)

    Guro Prestegard - 22.09.2016 - 13:26

  8. Colour Yourself Inspired

    Color Yourself Inspired™ is a generative artwork that creates unpredictable poetic phrases from Benjamin Moore’s paint color database; it is an interdisciplinary exploration of sound, color and language. An online collection of over 1000 unique color names are poetically sequenced using phonetic analysis and parts of speech analysis in a computer program designed by the artists. Instead of labeling color with language as the marketing team has done in the original database, Color Yourself Inspired (a marketing slogan from the Benjamin Moore website) inverts this relationship and uses language to generate visual information. (Source: http://thenewriver.us/color-yourself-inspired/)

    Nikol Hejlickova - 22.09.2016 - 15:38

  9. Hey Gorgeous

    "Hey Gorgeous" by Darius Kazemi is one, in a great number of remixes of the generative work "Taroko Gorge" by Scott Monfort. How Darius Kazemi remixes Monfort's work, is by changing the textstrings in the code, thereby changing the generated text which moves up the screen. "Hey Gorgeous" pictures a scene in a nightclub, with focus on men and boys, in relation with women, drugs, dancing etc.

    Guro Prestegard - 18.10.2016 - 15:22

  10. Garaż w Tokio

    A poetry generator for the imaginary city. Tokyo Garage is a remix of Nick Montfort's "Taroko Gorge" -- a nature poem generator built in javascript. Rettberg modified the code and substituted all of the language of Montfort's work to create this poetry generator, which plays with received stereotypes of the Tokyo metropolis and of urbanity in general.

    Guro Prestegard - 18.10.2016 - 15:52

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