Seabattle

Tiago Rorke | exhibition

Sea Battle (2016)

As humans our relationship with numbers, counting, and arithmetic, is closely linked to our relationship with mark‐making. Once we moved beyond our own body parts for counting, tally marks became the origin of many numeral systems, and are still evident in some present day writing systems.

Sea Battle uses mechanised mark‐making to interpret a popular pastime that emerged as a pencil and paper game in the early 20th century. By recreating the game at a scale where it is emphasised as an intercourse between machines and not between humans, the mechanical nature of the game is made more apparent, highlighting its computational qualities. This installation is not just a simulation however, but a performance that seeks to anthropomorphize the two machines within the context of the game. The drawing machines themselves are a representation of the simulation running invisibly in code, and it is the physical speed of the machines that determines the duration of each game.

On each side of the Tejo, a computer attached to a plotter runs a local instance of the Sea Battle application. As in the traditional game, for each turn the application analyses the state of the game, chooses a new target and over the internet sends this request to the other machine. After receiving a response it sends these drawing commands to the plotter, along with its opponent’s move, and the game continues. The simulation generates procedurally, such that every game is unique.

This project had the collaboration of Maurício Martins

29 SET: 10H00 – 22H00 | Museu das Comunicações

30 SET - 2 OUT: 10H00 – 18H00 | Museu das Comunicações

29 SET - 30 SET: 10H00 – 18H00 | Casa da Cerca

01 OUT - 02 OUT: 13H00 – 18H00 | Casa da Cerca