English:Peter Beyls (Q575594)

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Peter Beyls works on the intersection of computer science and the arts. He develops generative systems in music, the visual arts and hybrid formats. Beyls studied music and computer science at <a href="http://www.elektronmusikstudion.se/" target="_blank">EMS</a>, Stockholm, the Royal Music Conservatory, Brussels and the <a href="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/slade" target="_blank">Slade School of Art</a>, UC London. He was a researcher at <a href="http://cmr.soc.plymouth.ac.uk/" target="_blank">ICCMR</a> and was awarded a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Plymouth UK, for his research on evolutionary computing applied to real-time interactive music systems. He <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/publications.html">published</a> extensively on various aspects of digital media, in particular, real-time interactive music systems, generative art and, in general, the application of Artificial Intelligence for artistic purposes.

Beyls pioneered the use of cellular automata in the field of computer music while at the<a href="https://ai.vub.ac.be/" target="_blank"> VUB AI-Lab</a>. His work was widely exhibited and performed at conferences like Siggraph, ICMC, Imagina, ISCM, Generative Arts and ISEA. He was invited professor at a.o. the University of Quebec, Montreal, California Institute of the Arts, Shanghai Institute of Visual Arts, the School of Visual Arts, New York and the Osaka Arts University, Japan. Until September 2016, he was a research professor at <a href="http://www.porto.ucp.pt/en/citar" target="_blank">CITAR</a>, Catholic University of Portugal, Porto. He is currently a visiting researcher at the Department of Media Art, University College Ghent, specifically developing a project at  KASK <a href="https://schoolofartsgent.be/nl/agenda-nieuws/nieuws/kask-laboratorium-tijdens-vlaamse-wetenschapsweek" target="_blank">Laboratory</a> aiming to interface aesthetic and biological processes. Beyls is also a is a visiting professor at <a href="https://www.univ-paris8.fr/eur-artec" target="_blank">Artec</a>, University Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint Denis, Paris, France.

Peter Beyls has been involved with <a href="http://www.isea-web.org/" target="_blank">ISEA</a> (the International Symposium on Electronic Art) since the early 1990's, he is currently a member of the <a href="http://www.isea-web.org/about/committees/" target="_blank">IIAC</a> (ISEA International Advisory Committee). In addition, he is a partner  with the <a href="https://emfinstitute.org/" target="_blank">Electronic Music Foundation,</a> New York and associate with <a href="http://intermediaprojects.org/pages/IntermediaProjectsPresentsUr.html" target="_blank">Intermedia Projects</a>, Albuquerque, NM and the <a href="http://www.verostko.com/algorist.html" target="_blank">Algorists</a> collective.

Beyls was initially active in electronic music, as a composer of tape music. Later on, he developed various analog live electronic music systems. In close partnership with Michel Waisvisz, he designed and built the early prototypes of the <a href="http://crackle.org/" target="_blank">crackle box</a> synthesizer at <a href="http://www.steim.org/" target="_blank">STEIM</a>, Amsterdam (1973-1975). While teaching at the Vrije Academie/Psychopolis, The Hague, Beyls develops various collaborative projects with Dutch experimental filmmaker <a href="http://www.herowouters.nl/" target="_blank">Hero</a> Wouters. Around the same time, Karel Goeyvaerts and Lucien Goethals were his mentors at the <a href="http://www.ipem.ugent.be/" target="_blank">IPEM</a> Studio, Ghent. In the mid 1990s Beyls performs extensively in a trio with <a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Van_Rymenant" target="_blank">John</a> Van Rymenent and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoff_Leigh" target="_blank">Geoff</a> Leigh. Over the years, Beyls' engagement with music systems evolved from home-made electronics to time-sharing computers to laptop performance.

Beyls conceives of computer media as active partners in a creative process, a methodology he refers to as “conceptual navigation”. Software is written in order to explore  ambiguous intentions. Once an idea is formalized in a program, one can evaluate its imaginative potential by way of the feedback that program provides. Since a program reflects the objectives of the artist, programming is considered a method of aesthetic introspection. Software is thus instrumental as a functional, materialist means allowing the active manipulation of otherwise purely conceptual constructs.

Over the years, Beyls' <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/work.html">work</a> has primarily centered on generative systems, including extensive series of machine  drawings, human-machine interactive music systems using machine-learning and interactive audiovisual installations, many of them using computer-vision. A clear line of thought underpins the evolution of his artistic thinking: from methodologies borrowed from conventional AI (knowledge-based systems) to Artificial Life oriented systems exploring the notion of emergent functionality. An experimental, exploratory attitude is core to his work.

Beyls is equally fascinated by the problem of translating digital/virtual artifacts back into the tangible analog world as to make them available for humans to be experienced. This raises questions of how digital art is connected to the sensual parameters of human physicality and how it can be referenced/understood from the whole of human culture and the massive depth of its history. A monograph documenting his oeuvre was published by <a href="http://www.merpaperkunsthalle.org/projects/view/1079" target="_blank">MER Paperkunsthalle</a> in 2014. The event coincided with a major survey exhibition at <a href="http://www.imal.org/" target="_blank">IMAL</a>, Center for Digital Culture, Brussels. A more recent collection of texts entitled <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/cfc.html">Coming Full Circle</a>, (2019) was published by the <a href="https://verbekefoundation.com/en/" target="_blank">Verbeke Foundation</a> Belgium following a solo show at the Verbeke Museum. Beyls' work is represented by Gallery <a href="http://www.dam.org/" target="_blank">DAM</a>, Berlin, Germany.Peter Beyls works on the intersection of computer science and the arts. He develops generative systems in music, the visual arts and hybrid formats. Beyls studied music and computer science at <a href="http://www.elektronmusikstudion.se/" target="_blank">EMS</a>, Stockholm, the Royal Music Conservatory, Brussels and the <a href="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/slade" target="_blank">Slade School of Art</a>, UC London. He was a researcher at <a href="http://cmr.soc.plymouth.ac.uk/" target="_blank">ICCMR</a> and was awarded a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Plymouth UK, for his research on evolutionary computing applied to real-time interactive music systems. He <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/publications.html">published</a> extensively on various aspects of digital media, in particular, real-time interactive music systems, generative art and, in general, the application of Artificial Intelligence for artistic purposes.

Beyls pioneered the use of cellular automata in the field of computer music while at the<a href="https://ai.vub.ac.be/" target="_blank"> VUB AI-Lab</a>. His work was widely exhibited and performed at conferences like Siggraph, ICMC, Imagina, ISCM, Generative Arts and ISEA. He was invited professor at a.o. the University of Quebec, Montreal, California Institute of the Arts, Shanghai Institute of Visual Arts, the School of Visual Arts, New York and the Osaka Arts University, Japan. Until September 2016, he was a research professor at <a href="http://www.porto.ucp.pt/en/citar" target="_blank">CITAR</a>, Catholic University of Portugal, Porto. He is currently a visiting researcher at the Department of Media Art, University College Ghent, specifically developing a project at  KASK <a href="https://schoolofartsgent.be/nl/agenda-nieuws/nieuws/kask-laboratorium-tijdens-vlaamse-wetenschapsweek" target="_blank">Laboratory</a> aiming to interface aesthetic and biological processes. Beyls is also a is a visiting professor at <a href="https://www.univ-paris8.fr/eur-artec" target="_blank">Artec</a>, University Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint Denis, Paris, France.

Peter Beyls has been involved with <a href="http://www.isea-web.org/" target="_blank">ISEA</a> (the International Symposium on Electronic Art) since the early 1990's, he is currently a member of the <a href="http://www.isea-web.org/about/committees/" target="_blank">IIAC</a> (ISEA International Advisory Committee). In addition, he is a partner  with the <a href="https://emfinstitute.org/" target="_blank">Electronic Music Foundation,</a> New York and associate with <a href="http://intermediaprojects.org/pages/IntermediaProjectsPresentsUr.html" target="_blank">Intermedia Projects</a>, Albuquerque, NM and the <a href="http://www.verostko.com/algorist.html" target="_blank">Algorists</a> collective.

Beyls was initially active in electronic music, as a composer of tape music. Later on, he developed various analog live electronic music systems. In close partnership with Michel Waisvisz, he designed and built the early prototypes of the <a href="http://crackle.org/" target="_blank">crackle box</a> synthesizer at <a href="http://www.steim.org/" target="_blank">STEIM</a>, Amsterdam (1973-1975). While teaching at the Vrije Academie/Psychopolis, The Hague, Beyls develops various collaborative projects with Dutch experimental filmmaker <a href="http://www.herowouters.nl/" target="_blank">Hero</a> Wouters. Around the same time, Karel Goeyvaerts and Lucien Goethals were his mentors at the <a href="http://www.ipem.ugent.be/" target="_blank">IPEM</a> Studio, Ghent. In the mid 1990s Beyls performs extensively in a trio with <a href="https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Van_Rymenant" target="_blank">John</a> Van Rymenent and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoff_Leigh" target="_blank">Geoff</a> Leigh. Over the years, Beyls' engagement with music systems evolved from home-made electronics to time-sharing computers to laptop performance.

Beyls conceives of computer media as active partners in a creative process, a methodology he refers to as “conceptual navigation”. Software is written in order to explore  ambiguous intentions. Once an idea is formalized in a program, one can evaluate its imaginative potential by way of the feedback that program provides. Since a program reflects the objectives of the artist, programming is considered a method of aesthetic introspection. Software is thus instrumental as a functional, materialist means allowing the active manipulation of otherwise purely conceptual constructs.

Over the years, Beyls' <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/work.html">work</a> has primarily centered on generative systems, including extensive series of machine  drawings, human-machine interactive music systems using machine-learning and interactive audiovisual installations, many of them using computer-vision. A clear line of thought underpins the evolution of his artistic thinking: from methodologies borrowed from conventional AI (knowledge-based systems) to Artificial Life oriented systems exploring the notion of emergent functionality. An experimental, exploratory attitude is core to his work.

Beyls is equally fascinated by the problem of translating digital/virtual artifacts back into the tangible analog world as to make them available for humans to be experienced. This raises questions of how digital art is connected to the sensual parameters of human physicality and how it can be referenced/understood from the whole of human culture and the massive depth of its history. A monograph documenting his oeuvre was published by <a href="http://www.merpaperkunsthalle.org/projects/view/1079" target="_blank">MER Paperkunsthalle</a> in 2014. The event coincided with a major survey exhibition at <a href="http://www.imal.org/" target="_blank">IMAL</a>, Center for Digital Culture, Brussels. A more recent collection of texts entitled <a href="https://www.peterbeyls.net/cfc.html">Coming Full Circle</a>, (2019) was published by the <a href="https://verbekefoundation.com/en/" target="_blank">Verbeke Foundation</a> Belgium following a solo show at the Verbeke Museum. Beyls' work is represented by Gallery <a href="http://www.dam.org/" target="_blank">DAM</a>, Berlin, Germany.