
Ah A.I?WeiWei.
Laterday saints conversation with Livia after the Anthony Gormley sculpture at the Tate.
So is is A.I. spy with my little eye or A.I. wei wei later day Art Saint… call him Luke.
I really like the idea of translation games, to mandarin and Latin and laterday and future poets and philosophers.
It resonates they worried then, they worry now, the human condition remains the same and the question of the prime directive remains.
Why are we here and what and how do we do it?
Invisible Networks Program was a good place to start.
Release Date: 17 Apr 2019Available for over a year
How is technology changing the way we see? The artist James Bridle reimagines John Berger’s Ways of Seeing for the digital age and reveals the internet’s hidden infrastructure. “The way we see things is affected by what we know, or what we believe” – John Berger. In 1972, Berger’s seminal TV series and book changed perceptions of art and set out to reveal the language of images. Of course, that was before the internet, smartphones, and social media took hold. How do we see the world around us now? And, who are the artists urging us to look more closely?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/favourites/m000458l
In this first episode, Invisible Networks, James looks for the hidden, physical infrastructure of the internet. Does it matter that it’s being swept out of sight? Artists Hito Steyerl, Ingrid Burrington, Trevor Paglen, Olia Lialina, Julian Oliver and Danja Vasiliev explain why they’re compelled to show us what’s going on beneath the surface.
Producer: Steve Urquhart A Reduced Listening production for BBC Radio 4