Advances in Art: Orthogonal Disruption and the Beauty in Schematics
For artists and humanities scholars, this work provides a conceptual and practical framework to engage with AI-resistant art and complex technical systems, though it is an incremental proposal without empirical validation.
The paper proposes Orthogonal Art, a new artistic discipline defined by occupying spaces inaccessible to AI, and presents technical schematics as a medium. It also offers a pedagogical framework for cross-disciplinary literacy in Augmented Machines systems.
This paper introduces Orthogonal Art, a proposed artistic discipline that emerges in dialectical response to artificial intelligence rather than in service of it. Unlike AI-augmented creative practices, Orthogonal Art is structurally defined by occupying the generative and conceptual spaces that current AI systems cannot access. As a founding instantiation of this framework, the paper presents a novel artistic practice in which technical schematics serve as the primary medium. A significant secondary contribution is the pedagogical dimension of the work: by grounding artistic practice in schematic logic and algorithmic structure, the framework provides an accessible entry point into the advanced field of Augmented Machines systems, enabling cross-disciplinary literacy within Humanities at the intersection of art, engineering, and philosophy.