48

This puzzle belongs to the puzzle series: hyper-modern art


Two visitors are standing in front of a painting in the hyper-modern art gallery, discussing it.

"Well, I have to admit that I really don't understand hyper-modern art. It seems artists nowadays just plot anything without thinking and call it art. What do you make of this?"

"My friend, this clearly shows that one needs a certain eye to see the art. I think, actually, the artist did a very interesting job here..."

"Really? I know art isn't something to look 'nice on the wall', but I simply can't stand work like this. There is no thought going into it... Just some paint... and then pick a random name for your work and let the art critics come up with some meaning of it all, and voila, that's what it has been about all along..."

"Oh, quite the contrary my friend. Looking at the work, the name of the painting couldn't have been chosen more appropriately. In fact, one could discover the name in the painting, if it hadn't have been labelled. I think it was quite cleverly done..."


Can you determine the name of the painting below?
It consists of 4 characters.

CryptoPainting


The puzzle is solely contained in the digital image above. You may want to download it for full resolution and processing. In your answer, you have to state a clear and detailed explanation why your 'name' is the correct one. The name alone and some loose connections are not enough.

BmyGuest
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5 Answers5

41

Here is an answer that decodes this image. Not being a programmer, I used ImageJ and Stegsolve to look at this file.

Viewing with bit0 then bit1 provides these two images:

The left images are from the modern art picture above. The right images are generated from this Game of Life
Bit0 Bit1

Then continuing to toggle through bit2, bit3, bit4 provides the following images:

Bit2 Bit3 Bit4

And finally, these images with bit5, bit6, bit7

Bit5 Bit6 Bit7

So the name of the painting is:

LIFE because toggling through the bit planes provides images that match the original rules of Conway's Game of Life.
At each step in time, the following transitions occur:
- any live cell with fewer than two live neighbours dies, as if caused by under-population
- any live cell with two or three live neighbours lives on to the next generation
- any live cell with more than three live neighbours dies, as if by overcrowding
- any dead cell with exactly three live neighbours becomes a live cell, as if by reproduction

Len
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  • How about XOR-ing them instead of subtracting them? – justhalf Mar 05 '15 at 08:59
  • The zero-bit only idea has brought you 99% to the reasoning. If you explain the remaining pixel-values together with your final answer, it's the remaining 1%. – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 09:56
  • BTW, reading the colour table as ASCII is a nice idea. Hadn't thought of such as of yet. – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 09:58
  • Actually, StegSolve (thanks for the link) gives you 99.9%... – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 10:07
  • Close. You used StegSolve to look at bit0... anything else you can see in StegSolve... ? (And of course it helps to know Conway's Game of Life) – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 10:27
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    Hmm, can't think of any 4-character word other than the obvious answer of completing the phrase "The game of" with "Life". @Len: It's standard Game of Life rules, btw. – justhalf Mar 05 '15 at 10:50
  • Oh, based on your comment actually the answer is correct, and you're just looking for the reason? Then I think Len got it already. It's the completion of the phrase "The game of" and as we sift through bit 0 to 7, it represents Conway's Game of Life, with this reasoning, therefore the name of the painting is "Life". (Ok, I just realized that Len hasn't confidently answered the riddle with "Life" like mdc32 as I previously assumed) – justhalf Mar 05 '15 at 10:54
  • Yes. If you add the other 7 images (in bit-order), I'll accept your answer. @Justhalf: The part missing was that the other pixels represent the proper Game of Life sequence. – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 10:59
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    While I really like this question, I find it a bit hard to believe that you could deduce this from looking at a painting on the wall. In other words, the fluff doesn't really match the objective :P – Set Big O Mar 05 '15 at 16:06
  • @Geobits Well, mdc32 got the right answer just from looking at the picture. Knowing for sure that the answer is correct, on the other hand... – KSmarts Mar 05 '15 at 17:37
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    Any self-respecting hyper-modern visitor to a hyper-modern art gallery would be wearing their favorite brand of hyper-modern HUD hardware, @Geobits, which should, as a core trade show demo feature, include the ability to run a Game of Life simulation with any arbitrary visual input filtered to yield a starting configuration. – jscs Mar 05 '15 at 19:50
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    @Josh Good point. I'm more of a hack in this area of art; I just know what I like when I see it. – Set Big O Mar 05 '15 at 20:00
  • Just found this and thought it would make a nice comment on this puzzle.... – BmyGuest Jun 23 '16 at 11:59
16

Both answers make sense, but I believe it is called

Life. The pixels seem to represent Conway's Game of Life, and the (50) shades of gray represent how long ago/how many times the cells were living.

If not, then I believe it comes from that idea, but maybe

it has to be reversed to find a starting position in the shape of a word. I don't think this is the case because GoL is not reversible, but it is possible that this configuration is.

mdc32
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    The 1x3 blinkers don't look right for cell life count, though, since the ones above and below should be roughly the same shade as the ones to the left and right. –  Mar 04 '15 at 19:36
  • +1 and on the right track. The word is correct, but I'm not accepting yet. It is possible to look into more detail and give a less ambiguous reasoning. So, I'll wait a bit longer and accept then the "best" (correct) answer. – BmyGuest Mar 04 '15 at 22:09
  • My guess is that it's a bunch of iterations after the word "LIFE" spelled out in an initial configuration. –  Mar 05 '15 at 01:58
  • The puzzle does not involve guesses. Neither does it require you to go hunting trial and error style. – BmyGuest Mar 05 '15 at 06:14
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    Looking at the correct answer, technically "how long ago/how many times the cells were living" is correct, just that it is not linear =) – justhalf Mar 06 '15 at 01:36
4

I'm calling it:

Life after death.

Because:

If you rotate the bottom half 180 degrees you'll notice that it's almost identical to the top half. However, the second "blob" (for lack of a better word) in the bottom half is now clearly an upright person. In the top half, the corresponding blob is a human curled up on the ground, dead. The blob just to the right of the person is the car that hit him. The rectangular blobs to the left and right are the crosswalk signs, and the blobs to the far left are the bystanders. To the far right is clearly a skunk that has been frightened by all the noise and is in the act of spraying.

Duncan
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2

I think it is named

Flip The bottom is the same as the top (with some allowance for distortion of colors) rotated 180 degrees.

Paul Rowe
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    Potential spoiler (since I can't put spoiler tags in a comment: If you rotate them, you'll notice that they're very similar, but the second "blob" is different. – Duncan Mar 04 '15 at 17:45
  • @Duncan Thanks. I was having trouble with the markdown. – Paul Rowe Mar 04 '15 at 17:53
1

Perhaps

Spin. If you rotate the image 180 degrees it remains the same. Flipping it vertically results in a horizontal flip, and does not remain the same.

Ryan Durrant
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