Hyundai Commission Anicka Yi
As usual when visiting Tate Modern I had anticipated the latest rehash of the ‘Emperors new clothes’, habitually normal viewing there which explains why most of the general public tend to view modern art as crap. I was astonished to find that this was far from the norm, both original & enchanting, stunningly impressive I’m delighted to report.
The Tate blurb says this:
Hyundai Commission Anicka Yi
What would it feel like to share the world with machines that could live in the wild and evolve on their own?
Artist Anicka Yi offers a vision of a new ecosystem within the Turbine Hall, the large post-industrial space at the heart of Tate Modern.
Originally part of Bankside Power Station, the hall was built to house electricity-generating machinery. Yi’s installation populates the space with machines once again. Floating in the air, her machines – called aerobes – are based on ocean life forms and mushrooms. They re-imagine artificial intelligence, and encourage us to think about new ways machines might inhabit the world. Yi has also created unique scentscapes which change weekly, with odours linked to a specific time in the history of Bankside.
Yi is known for her experimental work which explores the merging of technology and biology. Through breaking down distinctions between plants, animals, micro-organisms and machines, she asks us to think about further understanding ourselves as humans and the ecosystems we live in.
Hyundai Commission Anicka Yi
As usual when visiting Tate Modern I had anticipated the latest rehash of the ‘Emperors new clothes’, habitually normal viewing there which explains why most of the general public tend to view modern art as crap. I was astonished to find that this was far from the norm, both original & enchanting, stunningly impressive I’m delighted to report.
The Tate blurb says this:
Hyundai Commission Anicka Yi
What would it feel like to share the world with machines that could live in the wild and evolve on their own?
Artist Anicka Yi offers a vision of a new ecosystem within the Turbine Hall, the large post-industrial space at the heart of Tate Modern.
Originally part of Bankside Power Station, the hall was built to house electricity-generating machinery. Yi’s installation populates the space with machines once again. Floating in the air, her machines – called aerobes – are based on ocean life forms and mushrooms. They re-imagine artificial intelligence, and encourage us to think about new ways machines might inhabit the world. Yi has also created unique scentscapes which change weekly, with odours linked to a specific time in the history of Bankside.
Yi is known for her experimental work which explores the merging of technology and biology. Through breaking down distinctions between plants, animals, micro-organisms and machines, she asks us to think about further understanding ourselves as humans and the ecosystems we live in.