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Casey Reas

Casey Edwin Barker Reas (born 1972), also known as C. E. B. Reas or Casey Reas,[1] is an American artist whose conceptual, procedural and minimal artworks explore ideas through the contemporary lens of software. Reas is perhaps best known for having created, with Ben Fry, the Processing programming language.[2]

Casey Reas

Casey Edwin Barker Reas

1972 (age 51–52)
Troy, Ohio, US

Education and early work[edit]

Reas was born Casey Edwin Barker Reas in 1972 in Troy, Ohio.[3][4] He studied design at the University of Cincinnati[5] and then spent the next two years developing software and electronics as an artistic exploration.[6] While studying design in Cincinnati, Reas was a member of a band called 'nancy' with Scott Devendorf and Matt Berninger, who went on to become members of The National.[7] Reas went on to direct four music videos for the band's 2017 album, Sleep Well Beast.[8][9]


In 2001, Reas earned a Master of Science in Media Arts and Sciences as a part of the Aesthetics and Computation Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's MIT Media Lab.[5]

Art career[edit]

After graduating, Reas began to exhibit his software and installations internationally in galleries and festivals. Reas's software generated images derive from short software-based instructions that visual create processes. The instructions are expressed in different media including natural language, machine code, and computer simulations, resulting in both dynamic and static images. Each translation reveals a different perspective on the process and combines with the others to produce continually evolving visual traces.[10][11][12]


In 2003, Reas moved to Los Angeles where he is currently a Professor in the Department of Design Media Arts at the University of California, Los Angeles.[13]


Since 2012, Reas has incorporated broadcast images into his work, algorithmically distorting them to create abstractions that retain traces of their original, representational function.[14] In 2020, Casey Reas co-founded a platform for showcasing internet art and digital art with curated exhibitions all for sale as non-fungible tokens.[15]

Processing[edit]

In 2001, together with MIT PhD candidate Ben Fry, Reas created the Processing programming language.[16][17][18] Processing is widely used by thousands of artists and designers worldwide, and by educators teaching the fundamentals of programing in art and design schools.[19][20]

the 's artport,[21][22]

Whitney Museum of American Art

in Austria,[23]

Ars Electronica

in Germany,

ZKM

in Berlin,

Transmediale

in San Francisco,

GAFFTA

Uijeongbu International Digital Art Festival in Korea,

the Danish Film Institute,

in New York and Seoul,

bitforms gallery

and ICC in Japan,

IAMAS

the Microwave International Media Art Festival in Hong Kong, and

the Festival in Barcelona.

Sónar

He has shown his work at:

the [24]

Victoria and Albert Museum

the ,[25]

Los Angeles County Museum of Art

the ,[26]

Carl and Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation

the , and

Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art

the Paris.[27]

Pompidou Centre

Reas' work is held in the following collections:

Casey Reas and , Processing: A Programming Handbook for Visual Designers and Artists, MIT Press, 2007.

Benjamin Fry

Casey Reas, Process compendium 2004-2010, REAS Studio, 2010.  978-1-4507-2713-6

ISBN

Casey Reas, Making Pictures with Generative Adversarial Networks, Anteism Books, 2019.  978-1-926968-47-6

ISBN

Timeline of programming languages

Processing programming language

Bruce Wands, Art of the Digital Age, Thames & Hudson, 2006.  0-500-23817-0.

ISBN

and Reena Jana, New Media Art, Taschen, 2006. ISBN 3-8228-3041-0.

Mark Tribe

Official website

List of works held by the Victoria and Albert Museum