27 September 2013

AMAZING PEOPLE - One artist, two robots and three cities: Painter creates a work of art in Vienna - while robot arms create the same picture in London and Berlin at the SAME time







One artist, two robots and three cities: Painter creates a work of art in Vienna - while robot arms create the same picture in London and Berlin at the SAME time


  • - Alex Kiessling's strokes are being copied by industrial robots in real-time
  • - The project is called ‘Long Distance’ and claims to be a world first
  • - The image of heads created by the robots and Kiessling will be joined together
      and 
    exhibited in Vienna and London

  • By ELLIE ZOLFAGHARIFARD



An Austrian artist has figured out how be in three places at the same time with the help of two robots.

Alex Kiessling is today creating a work of art simultaneously in Vienna, London and Berlin in what he described as a world first.

33 year-old Kiessling is using an infra-red sensor to trace the movements of his pen and send the signal via satellite to the industrial robots on Trafalgar Square and Breitscheidplatz.


Viennese artist Alex Kiessling is painting a 'Long Distance Art' picture in Vienna, Austria today
Viennese artist Alex Kiessling is painting a 'Long Distance Art' picture in Vienna, Austria today


The artist, who said he has a life-long fascination with robots, is using two ABB IRB 4600 industrial machines, each 2.8 metres high and weighing in at 435 kilograms.

    The robots will be controlled via satellite to produce the Berlin and London artworks.
    Kiessling said it took more than six months to perfect the technique and the software used.


    Alex Kiessling
    33 year-old Kiessling is using an infra-red sensor to trace the movements of his pen and send the signal via satellite to the industrial 
    robots on Trafalgar Square and Breitscheidplatz


    Alex Kiessling
    The artist, who admits to a life-long fascination with robots, is using two ABB IRB 4600 industrial robots, each 2.8 metres high and 
    weighing in at 435 kilograms


    Alex Kiessling
    The robots will be controlled via satellite to produce the Berlin and London artworks


    The cross-border project is called ‘Long Distance’ and claims to bring together art and technology in a way that has never been done before.

    Kiessling said that as he learned to work with the robots, he increasingly questioned the concepts of original and copy.

    ‘What are the machines doing, actually?’ he asked during a news conference.
    ‘It appeared to me in working with the machines that it was less about a kind of copy and more like a clone.’

    The artist is drawing a ‘hybrid head’ - one full face with two half heads on either side.
    The heads will be joined together and exhibited as a panel painting in Vienna and London.


    Alex Kiessling
    The cross-border project is called 'Long Distance' and claims to bring together art and technology in a way that has never been done 
    before


    Alex Kiessling
    The artist is drawing a 'hybrid head' - one full face with two half heads on either side. The heads will be joined together and exhibited as a triptych in Vienna and London


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