Alexander Reben | |
---|---|
Born | 1985 (age 38–39) |
Alma mater | State University of New York (BS, Applied Math), MIT (MS, Media Arts and Sciences) |
Known for | Artificial Intelligence art, research in social robotics |
Website | areben |
Alexander Reben (born 1985) is an American artist, researcher and roboticist.[1][2][3] He is best known for his artworks created in collaboration with artificial intelligence, and his research in robotics.[4][5] Reben's work has been exhibited widely in the United States and Western Europe, including the Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna and the Charlie James Gallery.[6] His work is included in permanent collection of the MIT Museum. He currently serves as Director of Technology and Research at Stochastic Labs, a Berkeley, California-based nonprofit incubator for artists, scientists and engineers.[7][8]
Alexander Reben studied Robotics and Applied Math at the State University of New York, graduating with a BS in 2008. In 2008 he moved to MIT Media Lab, where he completed an MS in Media Arts and Sciences.[9] He currently lives in California, USA.
While at MIT Media Lab, Reben designed a social robot and autonomous filmmaker Boxie which specialized in interviewing people.[10] and inspired the design of Baymax in Big Hero 6.[11] The idea later led to the establishing of BlabDroid Inc., in 2013, a company specializing in developing social robots to interact with humans around the world and create documentaries based on collected interviews. His BlabDroids filmed interviews at International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) and Tribeca Film Festival in 2013 and gained significant media attention.[12][13][14]
A core element of Reben's work lies in the conceptual study of technology's symbiosis with humans, including collaborating with AI during the creation of artworks. His most distinguished artworks include: "amalGAN" which is based on an AI algorithm which reads a human body's signals to produce artistic outputs, that are completed by human painters as oil painted canvases,[1][10][15] "AI Am I?" wherein an AI describes artworks that the artist renders in real life, "Robots in Residence" where social robots made autonomous documentaries,[2] and "Deeply Artificial Trees" which combines the “Deep Dream” AI with painting,[16] among others.[17][18][19]