
The Art of Glitch
Special | 6m 2sVideo has Closed Captions
Can glitches be made into art? Off Book explores a subculture that has done just that.
Glitches are the frustrating byproduct of technology gone awry. Many artists and programmers, however, have embraced these crisis moments and discovered beauty in the glitch. By hacking familiar systems, they intentionally cause glitches, and manipulate them to create art. Enjoying the aesthetics of technological mistakes defies the notion that technology and entertainment has to be seamless.

The Art of Glitch
Special | 6m 2sVideo has Closed Captions
Glitches are the frustrating byproduct of technology gone awry. Many artists and programmers, however, have embraced these crisis moments and discovered beauty in the glitch. By hacking familiar systems, they intentionally cause glitches, and manipulate them to create art. Enjoying the aesthetics of technological mistakes defies the notion that technology and entertainment has to be seamless.
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[music playing] DANIEL TEMKIN: The chart builds on the aesthetic and the experience of computer malfunction.
PHILLIP STEARNS: Glitch art is a lot about getting beyond this notion that these faults are actually faults.
SCOTT FITZGERALD: You know, it's trying to find the soul in the machine.
ANTON MARINI: A lot of these images are really compelling and very interesting.
Something's exposed that maybe you weren't quite prepared for it to be exposed.
[music playing] PHILLIP STEARNS: Glitch art is manipulating electronics and how they can be gateways into understanding the cultural values that are associated with our technology.
Although they may be intimidating, electronic technologies are actually still open mediums for expression and creativity.
When technologies are new, we're filled with all these promises.
Manufacturers tell us that these new tools are supposed to become a seamless way for us to express ourselves.
And then we run into unwelcome behavior.
Glitch artists manipulate those tools on another level to expand our vocabulary for communicating with each other.
In the way that punk music was a reaction against this hyper-polished, commercial rock and roll at the time, glitch art is also a reaction against the hyperrealism that is portrayed in contemporary media-- these super high-definition images saturated beyond real resemblance to actual color.
Glitch art is really providing people with material to create their own voice.
It's this notion that we don't have to accept what's been handed to us.
SCOTT FITZGERALD: Glitch art is a way of taking these fractures in existing systems and examine them in a way that tries to make sense of them-- whether it's through a still image, or moving video, or a sound file.
There's a bunch of different ways of creating glitches.
There's true glitches, which are things that make themselves manifest inside of systems without your intervention, like uploading an image to Flickr or something, and somewhere along the way some of the data gets corrupted.
And you wind up with this weird picture that looks like an image.
And then all of sudden you get these, like, bizarre colors.
That's sort of like a happy accident.
Or you can replicate it through other processes.
So what you do is you take-- like an MP3 file-- and instead of .mp3, you rename that file to .raw.
You open up the image in Photoshop.
It opens it up as if it were a raw file-- which is an image format-- and it reads through it bit by bit.
And each bit inside of there then becomes a visual representation of what's inside of that sound file, but inside of this black and white image.
Another way is to take an image and open it up with a text editor.
And then you go in and you delete stuff, add stuff in.
You're gonna get something totally weird.
In glitch art-- more so than a lot of other art forms-- I am a really big proponent of the idea that the process is more important.
Part of the process is empowering people to understand the tools and understand the underlying structures and what is going on inside of a computer.
So as soon as you understand a system enough to know why you're breaking it, then you have a better understanding of what the tool was built for.
ANTON MARINI: I stumbled onto this world of live video performance and live video software and glitch has been an aesthetic choice for me to explore.
That was a revelation because it made video malleable.
It made it like clay, where you can mold it and bend it and change it in real time and do edits in real time, do some limited effects in real time, and then express yourself live.
I think a lot of what glitch art is is finding out all of these strange nooks and crannies and exposing them and bringing them out to the forefront and showing that they can be quite interesting and do interesting things.
I actually write a lot of my own software to do these sorts of effects.
So some software when I run it, I don't know what I'm gonna get.
And so part of it is an integrative process of maybe you've gone too far and you've broken the file and it's unreadable.
Maybe you dial it back a little bit.
Some of it is faking glitch and making things look glitchy when maybe they really weren't, or finding ways to actually make it glitch out in interesting ways.
I want to be able to improvisationally react to what's going on in the environment.
And so if I know that there's something that I want-- there's like a feeling or an emotion with a certain visual-- I try to reverse engineer it.
And in that reverse engineering process, I'm trying to find something that's beautiful in these moments and that's fleeting.
I quite like that.
I think that a lot of the glitch art will work in that sort of sensibility of fleetingness and in the moment.
I think it's a very live sort of a thing.
DANIEL TEMKIN: Every time you walk through Times Square, one of the billboards is glitching out.
And you don't even necessarily notice it at first.
But if you're looking for it, they're there.
At first, they're upsetting.
But personally, I find them beautiful.
I don't think any glitch artist is gonna say that they have a lot of anxiety about technology.
Glitch artists mostly love technology.
There's a project by Jeff Donaldson and Antonio Roberts called Glitch Safari, which is just a collection of glitches found in the wild.
It's this way of collecting these found glitches and documenting them.
When you start to see the things that you discover through it that are interesting about the images, it becomes less traumatic.
And then when you go back and you see the glitches, it does tend to relieve that anxiety that people have when they see these things break down.
Now it has been incorporated into, like, advertising and all sorts of commercial work.
There's the Kanye West video.
And glitch artists have been able to present glitch work in all kinds of institutions.
So it's a good place to be to find pleasure in these things that are normally upsetting.
Being able to control what you're doing, but not completely, that's the fundamental thing I'm interested in-- the way that we misunderstand each other and the way we misunderstand the world.
All of sudden, we can misuse things and start experimenting and seeing where it leads you.
[music playing] ANTON MARINI: For me it's about the aesthetic, about the moment, about being able to have something that's happening with a certain sense of liveness.
SCOTT FITZGERALD: One of the reasons that this has become more prevalent as an art form is because people are starting to see more frequently these sorts of exposures.
DANIEL TEMKIN: Glitch is always gonna change as our relationship to technology changes.
PHILLIP STEARNS: Glitch art is wild.
It's a frontier.
It's sort of like this really quick and easy way, I think, you see the world.
[music playing]