I’m genuinely excited to share this thing I’ve been working on for more than 8 months. Here, I open the door to my studio through a preview of the work and its development process. At the same time, I want to make me available to respond to your questions and have direct interaction. Don’t hesitate to contact me.
“What you will see on the screen is a picture of the various abstract images that might pass through your mind if you sat in a concert hall listening to this music. At first you are conscious of the piano. Then the music begins to suggest other kinds of things to your imagination. They might be… oh, just masses of color. Or they may be cloud forms… or great landscapes, or vague shadows… or geometrical objects floating in space.”
— Fantasia (Walt Disney Productions, 1940)
A fantasia is a musical composition with a free form and often improvisatory style, seldom following the rules of any strict musical form. Fantasia (Alejandro Campos, 2024) is a generative experience born from a machine-generated musical score that informs the visual arrangement of constructed shapes, algorithmic textures, and emergent compositions. This series continues Campos’s ongoing attachment to playfulness, unencumbered acts of creativity, and the pursuit of capturing the joy of imagination.
In a unique blend of generative processes, Fantasia uses a machine learning model connected to an algorithmic process, producing both classical compositions and playful visuals – everything happening in-browser and real-time. The music’s AI model is trained on a large dataset of classical performances, creating a piano sheet that – as long as Fantasía remains open – continues an infinite improvisation that’s unique to each of the works. Each piece’s score is also used by the generative algorithm to produce a visual counterpart, like a map that traces the movements of notes on canvas: the colors capturing the different moods of each type of score, and the geometries expressing the musical structures of each composition.
Seeing these artworks can evoke the experience of listening to the music once again, and with each deeper exploration of the algorithm’s range, comes familiarity with this new fantastical language. The eye moving between shapes, the drawings conveying their musical narrative – Fantasia hides nothing, as if speaking in universal gestures.
This series uses brush.js (a library developed and open-sourced by Campos, now working without p5), Tensorflow.js (an open source ML platform for Javascript), Magenta.js for generating music with Magenta models, Tone.js (a Web Audio framework for creating interactive music in the browser), and several open source MIT license libraries. The music plays with Tone Piano, a multisampled piano implementation using Salamander Grand Piano Sounds.
And here’s the Grand Reveal, I hope you enjoy the experience. Click here to Refresh for a new Seed.
INTERVIEW
I’ve recently joined WTBS for an interview ahead of the upcoming 'Fantasia' release. We discussed:
- My background in art and coding, how I got involved with NFTs
- Why I use music in many of his projects & how I see generative art through the lens of web design and experience
- Tackling problems and ideas that nobody else has before & making the p5.brush library + the work that goes into launching an open source project
- Unearthing and reviving the defunct AI model that powers the music in Fantasia
- Where Fantasia sits in relation to the Enfantines series and Pensado a Mano
- Will there be more projects after Fantasia & disillusionment with web3
- The story of Generative Architecture: The Making of a Room on Verse and the potential to curate more in the future
SNEEK PEAK
into the process
into the process