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Editorial: Curating, Biennials, and Artificial
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Joasia Krysa and Manuela Moscoso
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S TA G E S – I S S U E 9
Stages 9
Editorial: Curating, Biennials, and
Artificial Intelligence
This volume of the Liverpool Biennial journal Stages draws connection between Artificial
Joasia Krysa and Manuela
Intelligence (AI) and curating, at the time of the 11th edition of Liverpool Biennial The Stomach
Moscoso
and The Port, and against the backdrop of the global pandemic, political and social turmoils,
and technologically mediated and sustained world at present. [1]
Considering the rapid developments in automation (such as AI) and how our relation to it has
changed, it poses questions about the implications for contemporary art; the limits of and
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Published by
Liverpool Biennial in
partnership with DATA
browser series.
ISSN: 2399-9675
possibilities for curatorial practice under these conditions, and the relevance and future of
cultural institutions and global biennials in particular in the post-pandemic world. What are the
Superintelligence: How Symbolic
Language Can Help Us Grasp The
Nature and Power of What is
Coming
Nora N. Khan
lessons to be learnt. What can the practice of curating learn from AI, what can AI learn from
MI3 (Machine Intelligence 3)
curating, and how can both learn from questioning knowledge forms derived from colonialist
Suzanne Treister
frameworks of humans and machines?
A Visual Introduction To AI
Rather than a theme, The Stomach and the Port explores the body, drawing upon non-Western
Elvia Vasconcelos
ways of thinking and knowledge production. The artists and thinkers gathered in this edition of
Liverpool Biennial challenge an understanding of the individual as an autonomous, self-
Excavating AI: The Politics of
sufficient entity. The body is instead seen as a fluid organism co-dependent on others,
Images in Machine Learning
continuously shaped by, and shaping, its environment. When our answers are drawn from a
Training Sets
foundation of knowledge steeped historically in Western reason and frames of thought, a social
Kate Crawford and Trevor Paglen
understanding of what constitutes the human has assumed a particular singular body: that of
Editor:
white man. Women, LGBTQIA, black and people of colour, indigenous people and nature, are
Joasia Krysa, Manuela
located in a space of lacking, in a place of disadvantage as well as subordination. Therefore,
Moscoso
borders are not only geographic, but political and subjective, an outcome of historical
processes created by the constitution of the modern/colonial world.
Editorial Assistant:
Abi Mitchell
Towards a Poetics Of Artificial
Notes On A (Dis)continuous
Surface
Murad Khan
Irresolvable Contradictions in
Algorithmic Thought
In the West, the brain has been designated the commander of intelligence. While our bodies
Leonardo Impett
inhabit the world, the brain processes our experiences and transforms them into knowledge —
Copyeditor:
this knowledge then informs our understanding of the capacity to process the world. But
Creative AI Lab: The Back-End
Melissa Larner
knowledge is not randomly produced, nor legitimized, as definitions and forms of classification
Environments of Art-Making
control the production of knowledge, and therefore the formation and reformation of
Eva Jäger
Web Design:
Mark El-Khatib
Cover Design:
Manuela Moscoso
(artwork), Joasia Krysa
(words), Helena Geilinger
(graphic design)
subjectivity. How we can re-calibrate our sensibilities and include a plurality of intellectualities
— not only coming from the brain — and to diversify knowledges of the world? Can we bring
Creative AI Database
bodily organizational force of experiences, feelings, knowledge, environments and
Serpentine R&D Platform & Kings
technologies together?
College London
A parallel problem runs through a history of artificial intelligence, where the brain (or mind) has
been a predominant metaphor, similarly steeped in instrumentalised notions of Western
rationality and reason. At the same time, it might be possible to begin to think outside of these
Research & Development at the Art
Institution
Victoria Ivanova and Ben Vickers
models and to look for other frameworks that not only include indigenous knowledge but non-
Future Art Ecosystems (FAE):
human knowledge. This is not a naive position - machine intelligence is fraught with problems,
Strategies for an Art-Industrial
not least how the models tend to replicate already existing gendered and racial biases, and
Revolution
established hierarchies and structures of power. However there are also ways out of this
Serpentine R&D Platform & Rival
thinking, once we can understand and articulate these social and technical frameworks
Strategy
sufficiently well to be able to reconfigure them otherwise.
Curating Data: Infrastructures of
These are active debates in critical AI[2], and the ones which provide a means through which to
Control and Affect … and Possible
not only reflect on parallel issues inherent to the contemporary globalised art world — and
Beyonds
curating — but to go beyond existing paradigms. What kind of future infrastructures and
Magda Tyzlik-Carver
curatorial practices can develop from the coming together of diverse human and non-human?
What new modes of expression and vocabularies are possible? What new understandings,
The Next Biennial Should be
entities, relationships, and practices can emerge through the exercise of biennial making once
Curated by a Machine - A Research
open to the possibilities afforded by expanded human and machine epistemologies?
Proposition
Joasia Krysa and Leonardo Impett
Reflecting these ideas, the title of this volume refers to a short text / research proposal ‘The
Glossary
Next Biennial Should be Curated by a Machine - A Research Proposition’ included in this
https://www.biennial.com/journal/issue-9/editorial-curating-biennials-and-artificial-intelligence
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Editorial: Curating, Biennials, and Artificial Intelligence | Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art
02/05/2021, 21:05
volume.[3] Other contributions include existing writing and projects by Nora Khan, Suzanne
Treister, Elvia Vasconcelos, Kate Crawford and Trevor Paglen, Victoria Ivanova and Ben
Vickers, alongside new contributions by Murad Khan, Eva Jäger, Leonardo Impett, Magdalena
Tyzlik-Carver, together framing these discussions across diverse fields. Underpinning the
discussion is a Glossary — an extract derived from Winnie Soon’s and Geoff Cox’s book
Aesthetic Programming (2021) — to provide a shared vocabulary for this volume.
The various contributions not only question the forms through which we formulate these
discussions today, but point to new possible directions. In her essay 'Towards a Poetics of
Artificial Superintelligence’, Nora N. Khan calls for new language, new imaginaries beyond
anthropomorphism, ‘to access what we can intuit is coming but can’t prove or describe
directly’; metaphors that ‘bridge the human and the unknown’ and that can ‘help bridge
inequities in rate and scale’. As her title suggestes, there is a future world emerging in which
humans are not the central intelligence but ‘irrelevant bystanders’ to Artificial
Superintelligence. What possible forms this might take is explored by artist Suzanne Treister in
her 2018 project MI3 (Machine Intelligence). It uses Google’s Machine Intelligence (machine
learning algorithms) to create and process bodies of datasets to eventually result in new works
of art, presented for copyright free download and print. These new works are 'images
containing the original source data of their own making, ghosts of the 3 created Machine
Intelligences transmuted into the style of a dead luminary artist, visions which may travel into
the future, inserting themselves into homes and spaces across the globe, witnesses, for an
unascertainable time span, of whatever is to come.' The process is visualised in a diagram
presented alongside description, images, and notes.Taking a similar diagrammatic strategy,
Elvia Vasconcelos’s contribution A Visual Introduction to AI
AI, presents a collection of
sketches intended as accessible maps to the history of AI and the basic components of the
complex architecture of artificial neural networks.
The intricacies of these processes, and of datasets in particular, is explored by Kate Crawford
and Trevor Paglen in ‘Excavating AI:The Politics of Images in Machine Learning Training Sets’,
to demonstrate how and what computers recognise — and indeed misrecognise — in an
image. Computer vision systems make decisions, and as such exercise power to shape the
world in their own images, and further reflect existing biases. This problem of bias and the
skin/surface is developed by Murad Khan in ‘Notes on a (Dis)continuous Surface’, in exploring
ethical questions over the role of automated data-processing instruments, specifically machine
learning algorithms, and the role they play in further entrenching existing racial inequalities,
racial biases and practices of discrimination. The essay exposes how racial representation
functions within machine-learning systems (itself inherently contaminated by the legacies of
the colonialism), ‘asking both how race is understood, and what can be achieved by encoding
this understanding’. The discriminatory logic of AI is further examined by Leonardo Impett in
‘Irresolvable contradictions in algorithmic thought’, drawing attention to the ongoing
contradictions between the commercial interests of Big Tech and the rhetoric of a fairer AI (socalled ‘Responsible AI’) — unable to escape the underlying contradictions at an algorithmic
level and in deep learning neural networks.
Following from this, Eva Jäger introduces the Creative AI Lab — a collaboration between the
R&D Platform at Serpentine Galleries and King’s College London’s Department of Digital
Humanities, and its first project Database of Creative AI - initiated in 2020 to collect tools
and resources for artists, engineers, curators and researchers interested in incorporating
machine learning and other forms of AI into their practice. A discussion on Serpentine’s R&D
Platform, is further developed Victoria Ivanova and Ben Vickers in their paper ‘Research &
Development at the Art Institution’. The text suggests possible directions for extending the
discussion to cultural institutions and questions of infrastructure, and to consider what they call
‘future art ecosystems’. An extract from the larger document, the first annual briefing paper
called Future Art Ecosystems, is also reproduced here (Chapter 3: ‘Strategies for an ArtIndustrial Revolution’)
Returning to some of the discussions around posthumanism, a more subjective register is
offered by Magda Tyzlik-Carver in ‘Curating Data: infrastructures of control and affect … and
possible beyond’, in which she describes the bodily experience of a curator and writer working
with data. She writes: ‘I am sensing how it feels to become posthuman, a body of data and
affect.’ As curating becomes increasingly posthuman, it takes place at different levels - it has
become an organised form of control executed by algorithms and made possible by big data,
while also directly affecting people whose lives have been incorporated into digital
infrastructures that maintain the system, a necessary element for the profitable performance of
Big Tech.
https://www.biennial.com/journal/issue-9/editorial-curating-biennials-and-artificial-intelligence
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Editorial: Curating, Biennials, and Artificial Intelligence | Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art
02/05/2021, 21:05
Finally, we return to the proposition of the title of the journal, ‘The Next Biennial Should be
Curated by a Machine: A Research Proposition’, in a text by Joasia Krysa andLeonardo Impett.
It introduces a conceptual premise of a larger research proposal that takes the form of
various machine learning experiments developed in the context of Liverpool Biennial 2021 to
explore machine curation and audience interaction in virtual LB2021.
Stages #9: The Next Biennial Should be Curated by a Machine is edited by Joasia Krysa and
Manuela Moscoso. Cover features Manuela Moscoso's curatorial sketch for Liverpool Biennial
2021, one of several sketches drawn during the course of conversations between the
editors in connection with the The Next Biennial project.
This volume is produced in collaboration with DATA Browser book series, and will be published
as an expanded version in 2021/22 (Open Humanities Press).[4] It has been made possible
by the generosity of all contributors, and with the support of Creative AI Lab, Serpentine,
London.
[1] Liverpool Biennial 2021: The Stomach and The Port, curated by Manuela Moscoso, 20 March – 6 June,
https://www.biennial.com/2020
[2] See the Glossary of terms in this volume, derived from Winnie Soon’s and Geoff Cox’s book Aesthetic
Programming: A Handbook of Software Studies, London: Open Humanities Press, 2020.
[3] The Next Biennial Should be Curated by A Machine is a research proposition and an umbrella concept that
gathers various experiments exploring the application of machine learning techniques to curating; title
and original curatorial concept by Joasia Krysa, technical conceptualisation and development by Leonardo
Impett, first experiment B³(TNSCAM) developed as a collaboration with artists Ubermorgen, co-commissioned
with the Whitney Museum of American Art for its online platform artport, curated by Christiane Paul.
Further research funded as part of UKRI/AHRC Strategic Priorities Fund: Towards National
Collection at: ai.biennial.com
[4] See: http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/series/da...
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Joasia Krysa and Manuela Moscoso
Joasia Krysa is a curator working at the intersection of art and technology. Her first curatorial software
experiment was launched at Tate Modern in 2005 and published in Curating Immateriality (2006). She is
Professor of Exhibition Research and Head of Art and Design at Liverpool John Moores University, with an
adjunct position at Liverpool Biennial. Formerly, she served as Artistic Director of Kunsthal Aarhus, Denmark,
part of the curatorial team for Documenta 13, and co-curator of Liverpool Biennial 2016. She is curatorial advisor
for Sapporo International Art Triennale (SIAF) 2020 and Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Manuela Moscoso is the curator of Liverpool Biennial 2021. Previously,she was the Senior Curator of Tamayo
Museo in Mexico City. Moscoso is part of Zarigüeya, a programme that activates relations between
contemporary art and the pre-Columbian collection of the Museo de Arte Precolombino Casa del Alabado,
Ecuador. Shewas the adjunct curator of the 12th Cuenca Biennial and the co-curator of the Queens International
2011 biennial. In 2012 she was appointed co-director of Capacete, a residency programme based in Brazil, where
she also co-ran the curatorial programmeTypewriter. Moscoso has collaborated with CA2M, Di Tella, MAM
Medellin, Museo de Rio, RedCat and Fundació Miró among other institutions.
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