An Artist Trapped Inside A Software Engineer

Posted by blackhole on Aug. 19, 2012, 6:47 a.m.

Originally posted on my blog.

Almost a decade ago, I thought I wanted to make games. I began building a graphics engine for that purpose, since back then, there were almost no open-source 2D graphics engines using 3D acceleration. It wasn't until later that I discovered I liked building the graphics engine more than I liked building games.

Times have changed, but I continued to tinker away on my graphics engine while going to college and learning just how stupid the rest of the world is. In the most recent bout of astonishing stupidity, my country has decided it doesn't recognize political asylum for people it doesn't like. It wasn't until reality had begun a full-scale assault on my creativity and imagination that I truly understood why artists feel compelled to lose themselves in their imaginations.

My imagination. It is something I could not possibly describe in any meaningful way. Art exists because some things can't be described, they must be shown. And yet, few things in my imagination are my own. I hunt down talented artists and visionaries, lose myself in the worlds they constructed, then take everything out of context and reconstruct my own worlds, perhaps based on another artist's vision, using the same concepts. I construct multiple visualizations, art styles, and game elements. My mental stage is fueled by awesome music, music that launches my imagination into incredible creative sprees. Sometimes I craft incredible melodies of my own, but rarely are they ever truly expressed in any satisfactory way in my music.

My life is one of creative frustration. I became obsessed with computer graphics as a way to realize my vision, but I wasn't interested in simply learning how to 3D model (which I happen to be terrible at, like everything else). I don't see the world as CGI, I see the world through the lens of a GPU. I look at things and ask, how might I render that? My imagination is not a static picture or movie, its a world that meant to be explored. Sometimes I play games for the storyline, or the gameplay, but the one thing that has always grabbed me is the ability to explore. I played Freelancer for 5 years, installed hundreds of mods, and was constantly enthralled simply by the exploration, the enormous universe, finding new systems, and discovering new places.

I can't draw a leaf. But I can create a mathematical model of it. I can calculate the textures and patterns, the branching veins and how each has their own specular, diffuse and transfer lighting functions. I can build abstractions and simulations, genetic recombinations and simplex noise algorithms. After I build tools to procedurally generate all the elements of a world, maybe then I can bring my imagination to life. But then, it's not really my imagination, it's what other artists inspire in me. I want to get as close to an artistic vision as possible, and beyond. I want to expand their artistic ideas and make them into something that is truly beautiful and inspiring, a clear extension of their vision, where it's soul shines like a beacon instead of being buried under bureaucratic bullshit.

I am an artist who cannot draw. I'm a musician incapable of painting the sonic landscape of my imagination. I am a dreamer who has no dreams of his own. If I am a programmer, it is because programming is the only way for me to express my creativity. But programming itself is not simply a means to an end. Programming is my paintbrush, my canvas, and my palette. I know how to read x86 assembly. I have abused C++11 lambdas to create temporary closures to hold a mutable state. I've crafted architectures and APIs and object-inheritance schemes and functional undo/redo stacks and lockless queues and kd-trees. Programming is my art and my music, and every new language or algorithm is another instrument for me to use when building my symphony.

Yet, many programmers hold little respect for alternative opinions. People who don't conform to strict guidelines are viewed as either terrible programmers or "cowboy" programmers destined to bring ruin to every project they touch. Everything must follow protocol, everyone must do things this way or that way. Instead of celebrating our diversity in programming languages, we viciously attack each other as using a "terrible language". Perhaps I have simply been inside a strange anomaly where everyone is obsessed with corporate practices and coding standards instead of building things.

Or perhaps I'm an artist trapped inside a software engineer.

Comments

Rez 11 years, 8 months ago

Or you're just an artist. If you can create a mathematical model of a leaf, then do that instead of draw it. If you use whatever tools you have at your disposal to produce your expressive outlet, you're still an artist to me.

I can't really code, or draw the way I want to (really, stuff rarely comes out the way I want it to). Even music is a struggle. But somehow, by sheer perseverance, I stumble into making things I like. And that's artistic expression to me. So I consider myself a kind of artist. Not because I draw, but because I create things coming from a part of me I can't explain.

Charlie Carlo 11 years, 8 months ago

Anything can be art. Seriously. So why can't code be art? I'm sure there's a lot of people that would hang a framed C++ script on their wall. Actually, that sounds pretty badass.

I kinda want one.

JuurianChi 11 years, 8 months ago

Soooo.

Let me get this straight…

Products of creativity are to be looked upon as art?

I had no idea…

:goes to create:

Charlie Carlo 11 years, 8 months ago

The way I've generalized it in my mind is, "art is everything, but deeper than that."

Which is how my mind works, instead of just saying other people's opinions are wrong, I factor them all into the equation and come to a theory that objectively accepts the majority of opinions. If Andy Warhol can make a box that looks like a detergent box and have it be praised as the finest art by many, than surely you can poop in a jar and it'd make some kind of incredibly deep, soul-crushing statement to it's viewer.

Alert Games 11 years, 8 months ago

I'm pretty sure you're a rabbit.

blackhole 11 years, 8 months ago

=:3

blackhole 11 years, 8 months ago

Sadly there are many people who have met me IRL who can confirm I am not really a rabbit, nor do I actually wear bunny ears all the time. I know, its such a disappointment.