Create Generative Art with R.
One overly simple but useful definition is that generative art is art programmed using a computer that intentionally introduces randomness as part of its creation process. -- Why Love Generative Art? - Artnome
The R
package generativeart
let's you create images based on many thousand points. The position of every single point is calculated by a formula, which has random parameters. Because of the random numbers, every image looks different.
In order to make an image reproducible, generative art
implements a log file that saves the file_name
, the seed
and the formula
.
You can install the package with the devtools
package directly from Github:
devtools::install_github("cutterkom/generativeart")
generativeart
uses the tidyverse
package.
The package works with a specific directory structure that fits my needs best. The first step is to create it with setup_directories()
. All images are saved by default in img/everything/
. I use img/handpicked/
to choose the best ones. In logfile/
you will find a csv
file that saves the file_name
, the seed
and the used formula
.
library(generativeart)
# set the paths
IMG_DIR <- "img/"
IMG_SUBDIR <- "everything/"
IMG_SUBDIR2 <- "handpicked/"
IMG_PATH <- paste0(IMG_DIR, IMG_SUBDIR)
LOGFILE_DIR <- "logfile/"
LOGFILE <- "logfile.csv"
LOGFILE_PATH <- paste0(LOGFILE_DIR, LOGFILE)
# create the directory structure
generativeart::setup_directories(IMG_DIR, IMG_SUBDIR, IMG_SUBDIR2, LOGFILE_DIR)
# include a specific formula, for example:
my_formula <- list(
x = quote(runif(1, -1, 1) * x_i^2 - sin(y_i^2)),
y = quote(runif(1, -1, 1) * y_i^3 - cos(x_i^2))
)
# call the main function to create five images with a polar coordinate system
generativeart::generate_img(formula = my_formula, nr_of_img = 5, polar = TRUE)
- You can create as many images as you want by setting
nr_of_img
. - For every image a seed is drawn from a number between 1 and 10000.
- This seed determines the random numbers in the formula.
- You can choose between cartesian and polar coordinate systems by setting
polar = TRUE
orpolar = FALSE
- the formula is a
list()
It is a good idea to use the sine and cosine in the formula, since it guarantees nice shapes, especially when combined with a polar coordinate system. One simple example:
my_formula <- list(
x = quote(runif(1, -1, 1) * x_i^2 - sin(y_i^2)),
y = quote(runif(1, -1, 1) * y_i^3 - cos(x_i^2))
)
generativeart::generate_img(formula = my_formula, nr_of_img = 5, polar = TRUE)
Two possible images:
The corresponding log file looks like that:
file_name | seed | formula_x | formula_y |
---|---|---|---|
2018-11-16-17-13_seed_1821.png | 1821 | runif(1, -1, 1) * x_i^2 - sin(y_i^2) | runif(1, -1, 1) * y_i^3 - cos(x_i^2) |
2018-11-16-17-12_seed_5451.png | 5451 | runif(1, -1, 1) * x_i^2 - sin(y_i^2) | runif(1, -1, 1) * y_i^3 - cos(x_i^2) |
The basic concept is heavily inspired by Fronkonstin's great blog.