“Chatbots, Tongues, Denial, & Various Other Abstractions” Exhibition

Bortolami

poster for “Chatbots, Tongues, Denial, & Various Other Abstractions” Exhibition
[Image: Ian Cheng "Baby Feat. Ikaria" (2013) (still), Live sumulation, infinite duration, artificial intelligence services]

This event has ended.

Vision has always been unreliable. Whether true or false, could a photograph or a painting ever show us more than the outward appearance of things? But today visual form seems more vexed than ever.

Under the aegis of digitization, we are bombarded with images, and yet so much of labor, leisure and communication happens invisibly, across fiber optic channels, server farms, and encrypted Wi-Fi signals, unseen except for some computer algorithm silently collecting data, and then whatever glowing array might appear within the confines of a rectangular screen. And any distance between visual art and the various myths and spectacles of our time is so uncertain: does art “reflect on” the current ideology of information and dematerialization, or is it an instrument of this ideology itself, furnishing images for a new order of things?

Each of the works in this exhibition has something to say about life today. In particular, it seems to me that in all of them a certain deliquescence of things — a utopia of dematerialization and digitization — appears inseparable from a disordering, a systemic breakdown. But if the question is still how art might reflect on the changing conditions of living by finding out what it takes to make a representation of them, the answers are more difficult. Who or what is represented on the surface of Carissa Rodriguez’s pathologically flattened tongues, by the babbling chatbots in Ian Cheng’s digital simulation, in the pixels of Melanie Gilligan’s digital filters, or within the congealed interior of Anicka Yi’s objects?

Things and pictures never add up, and maybe these works frame, and savor, certain discrepancies. An insensible traffic between surface and depth: between internal organs and skin, computer program and human cognition, fossilized memories and spectral projection, the flatness of things and a sense of distance and history. — Jacob King

Media

Schedule

from June 12, 2014 to August 22, 2014

Opening Reception on 2014-06-12 from 18:00 to 20:00

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