After TroublemakersProsopopées and Les Faits du hasard, this is the fourth main exhibition imagined by Gilles Alvarez and José-Manuel Gonçalvès for the Nemo biennale a festival of new media art of Paris region.

The Idea

Visitors are invited to project in another world, a world without humanity, where the last human being has left, forgetting to turn the light off! The future archaeology of a digital world. Visitors come to discover a museum abandoned since 2019, after the disappearance of the human race…

Room after room, they will discover an exhibition of digital contemporary art and robotics in which the artworks have continued to function in complete autonomy, without their creators or their initial public. Paradoxically, this exhibition was programmed in an age when human beings did worry, quite rightly, about their possible disappearance, and their plausible replacement by machines and A.I.

From then on, what was a speculative exhibition, interrogating futures that are more or less desirable, has become an archaeological exhibition in 2019, when everything came to an end for the homo sapiens

My thoughts

Perhaps because I visit many exhibitions featuring artists working with AI, robotics, etc I find a bit overdue the apocalypse approach, whereas it might not be necessarily the intention of the curator, we risk of ending trashing technology and everything with it. Personally, the doom and gloom scenography gets me down. So when I read the intro text I was en guard.

However, there are truly beautiful and interesting pieces. The exhibition space at 104 is particularly challenging. It’s a beautiful and huge place, full of life, but it’s difficult to create the unicity required in an exhibition.

I particularly liked two artworks also exhibited at last year’s edition of Ars electronica both caught my eye: « SEER » de Takayuki Todo and « Lasermice » de So Kanno.

“SEER” (Simulative Emotional Expression Robot) is a humanoid robotic head developed as an artistic work by Takayuki Todo. It explores the significance of gaze and facial expression in the sphere of human-machine research.

“Lasermice” is a robotic installation of 60 small robots, inspired by the synchronous behaviour of insects like fireflies. Normally a swarm network is invisible, but, here the robots create a visible network using their laser lights, As a result, they generate a pattern of rhythms that changes continually. The generated sound is made audible by a solenoid which strikes the floor. The resulting installation is a combination of the visible laser light network and rhythms.

Many of the selected artworks talk about technology without necessarily being technological.

Maarten Vanden Eynde The Great Decline 2019 Printed circuit boards (PCB), various seeds

I found particularly moving the monumental work of « Post-naturalia » et « Out of Power Tower » de Krištof Kintera.

I also really enjoyed Cénotaphe » de Thomas Garnier.

Finally, I would like to mention a mesmerizing, meditative and mysterious piece from Fabien Leaustic  La Terre est-elle ronde?

■ From 12th October 2019 to 9th February 2020 ■

— « SEER » de Takayuki Todo

— « Co(AI)xistence » de Justine Emard

— « Post-naturalia » et « Out of Power Tower » de Krištof Kintera

— « Mondiale TM » de Beb-Deum

— « Canto V » d’Arcangelo Sassolino

— « Homunculus Ioxodontus » et « Refugus » de Margriet van Breevoort

— « What Do Machines Sing Of ? » de Martin Backes

— « La Terre est-elle ronde ? » de Fabien Léaustic

— « Solid State » d’Alexander Schubert

— « Lasermice » de So Kanno

— « Homo Stupidus Stupidus », «  The Great Decline » et « Technofossils »  de Maarten Vanden Eynde

— « Ad lib. » de Michele Spanghero

— « Cénotaphe » de Thomas Garnier

— « An Exhibition for Future Generations » de Vladimir Abikh,

— « Cimetière du réconfort » de Timothée Chalazonitis

— « Tomorrow’s Borrowed-Scenery » de Paul Duncombe

— « Planète Z » de Momoko Seto

— « unearth/Paleo Pacific » de Shun Owada