Fine art, with a glitch. touch.gl, on Android. All photos courtesy the artist.

Fine art, with a glitch. touch.gl, on Android. All photos courtesy the artist.

Even Paris’ famed Centre Pompidou, it seems, has discovered apps. But you can bring some of that glitch art to your fingertips — for once, Android-only rather than exclusive to iOS.

Hungarian-born, Berlin-based artist David Szauder (pixel noizz) has made a rather beautiful art app, extending glitch image modification to finger painting on the Android platform, via Processing for Android. It’s not the first app to reach into the world of glitch. But the deepest of these – the wonderful, pioneering Satromizer, by Ben Syverson with Chicago new media artist Jon Satrom – is so good at hacking into images, it can be puzzling. It’s perhaps best understood as a gesture-powered data-glitching tool. And it’s iOS only. Glitché is closer to the Instagram model, applying filters at once, often with eye-bleeding results.

touch.gl first preview video from pixel noizz on Vimeo.

touch.gl, by contrast, is the first app I’ve seen that really seems like a glitch painting app, intuitive and expressive. Kids take to it well, as you can see in some of the images here, but it’s also something an artist might want in their arsenal.

Nicely enough, you can also trace the ups and downs of the app’s development via David’s blog. Let’s follow along:

processing not that pain

touch.gl goes to Pompidou

Touch.GL vs. failed memories

Francis Lam, Marius Watz, Emilio Gomariz and Chris Shier, Mark Essen, David Szauder, Angelo Plessas and Yoshi Sodeoka were part of the Pompidou show; more on that at ofluxo.

cheng

glitchexhibition

kidsglitchgl

touchglgui

See also David’s free glitch app for OS X:
GlitchPatternGenerator_5 (experimental release)

For fans of the post-digital, yes, the age of glitch can also in turn impact traditional paint media. Here’s a beautiful example, in oil paint – no computers around. (Brother of a reader, apparently!)

http://erikolson.ca/