Video: The artistic laws of robotics. Human robots in the paintings of Goro Fujita
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
I wonder why the Japanese are so fond of robots? And what in general can there be in common between living people and soulless apparatuses? Both of these questions are not easy to answer. One thing is clear: Japanese-American artist Goro Fujita really loves robots - and not because they are powerful and smart, but because they … human.
Favorite images of paintings famous painter and illustrator Goro Fujita - funny cartoon characters, funny monsters and robots … However, there are millions of such illustrations and pictures, even made at a very high level, and thousands of new ones appear every day. What makes Goro Fujita's paintings more than just funny sketches? As corny as it is, soul.
Finally, the yardstick of all things is man … Human confusion and loneliness, his delight and helplessness in front of the cruel beauty of the world, human eyes, robotic bodies and a little light humor - this is the recipe for the best works of the Japanese artist … After all, when we create robots, can we not share with them what makes us human?
Goro fujita with his instinct of the artist, he deeply felt that a robot in contemporary art is another the person's face … Great science fiction writers, directors and animators who have created a gallery of robots from Terminator and Wall-E to R2D2 and Benderput into a mechanical brain a deep, suffering and thinking human soul.
A man who became one of the most famous science fiction writers in the last century, a great lover of robots and people, Isaac Asimov invented "Three Laws of Robotics"that forbid robots to do evil and harm people. Looking at the bright pictures of Goro Fujita, I somehow cannot believe in the evil emanating from robots, but in the number new laws of robotics I want to write another one - humanity … The friendship between humans and robots, seen in these works, is an artistic metaphor for the universal world brotherhood. And, since in the modern world there are no intelligent robots yet, you understand that first of all Goro Fujita means brotherhood of men … That is why his paintings are not just illustrations for science fiction, but real art.
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