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CAC·Exhibition | Open Codes. Connected Bots

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Open Codes. Connected Bots

July 20 – October 7, 2019

Chronus Art Center (CAC)

BLDG.18, No.50 Moganshan RD., Shanghai

Curated  by

Christian L?LKES, Lívia NOLASCO-RóZSáS, and ZHANG Ga

Artists

aaajiao, Zach Blas and Jemima Wyman, Bleeptrack, James Bridle, Max Cooper and Andy Lomas, Kate Crawford and Vladan Joler, DISNOVATION.ORG , Jonas Eltes, César Escudero Andaluz and Martín Nadal, GUO Cheng, Bernd Lintermann, Shawn Maximo, Joana Moll, Sebastian Schmieg, Adam Slowik, Nye Thompson, WANG Changcun, Peter Weibel and Christian L?lkes, ZKM | Hertz-Lab, 996.ICU

 

Co-organized by

Chronus Art Center (CAC), ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe


Supported by

Vitra


Opening Reception & Artist Talk

July 20, 2019 (Saturday)

Artist Talk: 4:00 – 5:00 pm

Opening Reception: 5:00 – 7:00 pm


On View

11 am – 6 pm Wednesdays – Sundays

Admission: ¥ 20 (Free admission on Wednesdays and Public event days)

Chronus Art Center (CAC) is pleased to announce the exhibition Open Codes. Connected Bots, co-organized by CAC and ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Germany.

 Exhibition Concept 

 

Open Codes brings computing and art together in various ways. It is a new form of assembly, combining practical knowledge of computer code and critical artistic approaches in a single venue. The project seeks to empower its participants to regain access to reality through instruments of thought and to reflect on the genealogy and current social impact of digital code, computer programming, and software.

 

The current iteration of this project at the Chronus Art Center focuses on the affective resonance of algorithms and the reciprocal, perceptual entanglements of computational simulacra and physical reality. The ability to navigate the world of code, hand in hand with digital literacy, are essential to contemporary society in the age of planetary-scale computation, especially when algorithmic agents are designed to influence public opinion.

 

Virtual software agents, colloquially referred to as bots, run mostly repetitive tasks at a higher speed than humans ever could. Some specialize in conversations on online platforms, where they are programmed to act like regular people. Social media bots are a product of the new economies of visibility and currently make up more than half of online traffic. Some bots can learn from us; others can spider the web to index content; further ones strive to alter our mindsets and are used in political campaigns, and others maliciously litter inboxes with spam.

 

The world bot derives from “robot”, first used by Karel ?apek in his 1920 science fiction novel, to describe a fictional humanoid. Robot became known as a word for autonomous machines, capable of carrying out complex tasks, that can be forced to work, as the meaning of the Czech word ‘robota’ suggests. Robots, whether with or without a built body, are meant to provide services, much like the natural language conversation program, ELIZA, described by Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966. This early chatbot was in some users’ opinion a better psychologist than its human alternatives. A couple of decades later virtual assistants, like Alexa, are not only capable of chatting, but of accomplishing more complex tasks, and are now as mundane as a hairdryer in certain parts of the world. 

 

Countless experiments and actual applications of binary-based human substitutes are now in use. Despite their advantages, these tools come at a price – the seamless operation of a virtual assistant obscures cumbersome human labour. Chatbots aggregate knowledge from their conversations with users, who do not necessarily represent society as a whole, thus their statements often repeat racist or sexist opinions and may reinforce the kinds of social exclusion they have been fed with.

 

Whether they play music, mine bitcoin, or chat with us, the bots’ influence grows. As a consequence of this development, we might ask if we are becoming bots ourselves? As we sit in a stylish co-working space in front of a computer, bots are influencing our decisions. Algorithms numb human agency to a shocking degree, with inevitable implications for perception, memory, and social interactions, whether with bots or among ourselves. Human dependency on computation has become mutually reinforcing on multiple levels, going beyond binary oppositions. 

 

The exhibition includes artworks based on computer code, as well as artworks that reveal how deeply such code has penetrated our lives, societies, geopolitical situations, fiscal systems, labour conditions, infrastructure, environment, and even the perception of our own source code, DNA.

 

With the aid of around 20 works by artists and programmers, the exhibition presents the world of digital code and its future influence in eight sections: 


#GenealogyOfCode

#Coding

#MachineLearning

#AlgorithmicGovernance

#AlgorithmicEconomy

#VirtualReality

#Labor&Production

#GeneticCode



These key terms form an imaginary map, which serves as the grounds for understanding the world we inhabit.

 

From an algorithm that turns the latest media headlines into artistic concepts (DISNOVATION.ORG: Predictive Art Bot, 2017), to the anatomy of a particular AI system (Kate Crawford, Vladan Joler: Anatomy of an AI System, 2018), or a resurrected chatbot, sharing its life story (Zach Blas, Jemima Wyman: im here to learn so :)))))), 2017), artists analyze contemporary realities, in which human and algorithmic agency are interwoven.

 


DISNOVATION.ORG, Predictive Art Bot, 2017, two-channel projection, online bot. Exhibition view from a solo show in Nantes. ? Photo: the artists


Kate Crawford and Vladan Joler, Anatomy of an AI System, 2018, Print. Exhibition view at Open Codes, ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. ? ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Photo: Jonas Zilius

 

Zach Blas and Jemima Wyman, im here to learn so :)))))), 2017, 4-channel video installation, Exhibition view at Open Codes, ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. ? ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Photo: Jonas Zilius


A neural network, a type of artificial intelligence application, was used to depict a machine’s assumptions of how people would think a machine would interpret the mind (aaajiao: bot,, 2017-18). Algorithms construct identities in manifold ways, not just by infiltrating perception and memories, but through their presence and absence in certain geopolitical situations. In the project The Net Wanderer, the artist explores the connection between the critical network gateways in China and the infrastructure running these gateways (GUO Cheng: The Net Wanderer. A TourSuspended Handshakes, 2019).


aaajiao in collaboration with Quanquan, bot,, 2017-18, single channel video, color; website screenshots. ?Photo: the artist  


GUO Cheng: The Net Wanderer. A TourSuspended Handshakes, 2019, interactive installation ? Photo: the artist


The discourse of the exhibition is laid out as an architectonic parcours to offer visitors the opportunity to use the workstations for independent creative activities. The spaces of Chronus Art Center bear multiple functions: the exhibition halls display artworks, but are also available for events, workshops, meetups, and lectures, as well as independently browsing Open Codes’ thematically curated library.

 

The Shanghai iteration of the project was partially developed in collaboration with the Central Academy of Fine Arts and Tongji University, as well as with hacker and maker spaces. Selected student works will be presented throughout the duration of the exhibition. The exhibition is generously supported by Vitra.

 

Open Codes. Connected Bots is a satellite exhibition of Open Codes at the ZKM | Centre for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Germany, which ran from October 20, 2017 to June 2, 2019.



 Co-organized by 




Established in 2013, Chronus Art Center (CAC) is China’s first nonprofit art organization dedicated to the presentation, research / creation and scholarship of media art. CAC with its exhibitions, residency oriented fellowships, lectures and workshop programs and through its archiving and publishing initiatives, creates a multifaceted and vibrant platform for the discourse, production and dissemination of media art in a global context. CAC is positioned to advance artistic innovation and cultural awareness by critically engaging with media technologies that are transforming and reshaping contemporary experiences. 


www.chronusartcenter.org




As a place expanding the original tasks of the museum, the ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe is a unique cultural institution worldwide. Founded in 1989 as a museum with the mission of continuing the classical arts into the digital age, today it is a house of all media and genres, a house of both spatial arts such as painting, photography and sculpture and time-based arts such as film, video, media art, music, dance, theater and performance. This is why it is sometimes called the “electronic or digital Bauhaus” – an expression that is traced back to the founding director Heinrich Klotz. Under the direction of Peter Weibel, the ZKM has developed into an interactive and performative center of the arts that creates new relationships between art and the public.


www.zkm.de


 Supported by 



Creating innovative products and concepts with great design is Vitra’s essence. These are developed in Switzerland and installed worldwide by architects, companies and individuals to build inspirational spaces, both public and private, for living and working. Examples can be found in prominent locations as the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Fendi Headquarters in Rome, the Tate Modern in London, the Amorepacific Headquarters in Seoul or Dubai International Airport. With classics such as the Standard Chair by Jean Prouvé and the Panton Chair by Verner Panton, Vitra represents groundbreaking 20thcentury design. Today, in combining technical and conceptual expertise with the creativity of contemporary designers, Vitra seeks to continue pushing the boundaries of the design discipline.


www.vitra.com







新时线媒体艺术中心(CAC)成立于2013年,系国内首家致力于媒体艺术之展示、研究/创作及学术交流的非营利性艺术机构。通过展览、驻留、奖学金、讲座、工作坊及相关文献的梳理与出版,CAC为媒体艺术在全球语境中的论述、生产及传播开拓了一个多样化且富有活力的平台。CAC以批判地介入不断改变进而重塑当代经验的媒体技术来推动艺术创新及文化认知。


Established in 2013, Chronus Art Center (CAC) is China’s first nonprofit art organization dedicated to the presentation, research / creation and scholarship of media art. CAC with its exhibitions, residency-oriented fellowships, lectures and workshop programs and through its archiving and publishing initiatives, creates a multifaceted and vibrant platform for the discourse, production and dissemination of media art in a global context. CAC is positioned to advance artistic innovation and cultural awareness by critically engaging with media technologies that are transforming and reshaping contemporary experiences. 


www.chronusartcenter.org



更多展览以及艺术家信息请持续关注新时线媒体艺术中心微信公众号动态.

媒体垂询:haoyu@chronusartcenter.org


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