According to Timothy Morton, there is nothing artificial that is not enmeshed with nature – and nature cannot be understood as something separate from our artificial creations. As humans, however, we struggle to grasp this mesh, as it manifests on different scales of time and space. To see across these scales, we might need new forms of representation: “We have only to speed up our sense of time to see how strange life forms are. They arise, flicker, and vanish. Plants and fungi do move, like animals in slow motion (think of a sunflower). If you read Darwin, the strongest thing you take away is a feeling of time-lapse.”
This project is inspired by the idea of the botanical garden. It draws on its concept of “science and pleasure,” on human-made nature, and modernity’s obsession with taxonomies that bring order to the strangeness of the world. It uses generative artificial intelligence to explore different scales of ecological thought, experimenting with time-lapses and latent spaces, custom AI models, and the tools and techniques that bring AI images into space and motion. We will try to approach the paradoxes within artificial intelligence, its roots in classification and optimization, its failings in addressing the climate crisis, and its potential to create new ecologies.
In loose collaboration with the motion design and animation students of Burg Giebichenstein Kunsthochschule Halle (Prof. Thomas Hawranke, PhD), we construct artificial natures and natural machinery. Our goal is creating an experimental botanical garden that can be exhibited together.