Manfred Mohr, one and zero
Publication
Carroll / Fletcher, London, 2012
Casebound, 64 pp., 175 × 245 mm
Beginning in 1969, Manfred Mohr was one of the first visual artists to explore the use of algorithms and computer programs to make independent abstract artworks. His early computer plotter drawings – when he had access to one of the earliest computer driven plotter drawing machines at the Meteorology Institute in Paris – are delicate, spare monochrome works on paper derived from algorithms devised by the artist and executed by the computer. one and zero explores how the complexity of the cube in 3, 4, 5, 6 and 11 dimensions, as well as the possibilities of going to even higher dimensions, have influenced Mohr’s practice over the course of forty years.
Joe Gilmore
Graphic Design
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