This reading affected me by helping me understand that the coded system itself is the creative act. Which led me to the question “What point does the computer go from being a tool to a collaborator helping in the creative process?” .When randomness is introduced, the outcome is no longer fully controlled by the artist, and this lack of control is actually very intentional. The artist writes instructions, but the results can be unexpected, and that uncertainty becomes part of the artwork. I noticed this idea reflected clearly in the code I wrote for the assignment. I created a system with rules for line width, square size, and color, but each of these elements was randomized within certain limitations. For example, the line width was random between one and four, and the square size was random between 20 and 45. This allowed me to maintain some control over the overall structure while still allowing the visuals to remain unpredictable. The outcome felt more alive and dynamic because it was never exactly the same.I planned to incorporate random elements into my work by using color, line weight, and shape size. As the speaker Cassie Reas explains, us, me, the artist (coder), designs the rules of a system rather than controlling a single outcome, treating the code as a set of rules that guide the work instead of controlling exactly how it turns out.
The optimum balance is achievable by controlling the rules without limiting the outcomes. Setting constraints allows the work to stay coherent while still being unpredictable. I feel that the ideal balance exists when I can predict the behavior of the system, but not the final visual result. In my work, I was able to control what elements could vary and the range in which they changed, but I could not predict the exact combinations of square size, line width, and color that appeared every two frames.
Casey Reas mentions the term system based art, which is when the artwork functions as a system defined by behaviors rather than a single image. In this approach, the work exists as an ongoing process instead of a finished product. This idea connects closely to my piece, since it generates new variations every time it runs, making no single outcome the definitive version of the artwork.