
"Initially, an animation is created by translating an image of Nam June Paik's TV-Buddha with a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. Achieved by breaking down the image so that each pixel of the original image creates one frame of the animation. The animation runs at the standard movie rate of 24 frames per second (fps), resulting in an animation that lasts exactly 24 hours."
"A television displays this animation, and a webcam positioned directly opposite it records it at 24 FPS. A computer processes the data entering the camera and, after 24 hours, reconstructs it back into a 1920 x 1080 image. However, due to errors caused by ambient light and other environmental factors, the new image will not be a replica of the original."
An animation is created by translating a 1920 x 1080 image so that each original pixel becomes a single frame. The animation runs at 24 frames per second, producing a 24-hour playback. A television displays the animation while a webcam positioned opposite records at 24 FPS. A computer reconstructs a 1920 x 1080 image from the 24 hours of recorded data. Ambient light and environmental noise introduce errors, and repeated display–record–reconstruct cycles gradually erase or corrupt the original features. A real-time projection shows progress and intermittently displays the seed and prior reconstructions. The process highlights differences between physical reality and purely virtual reproduction and exposes limitations of digital capture.
Read at CreativeApplications.Net
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