Saturday, August 13, 2016

Artificial intelligence exhibit from Venice California visual artist James Georgopoulos



In James Georgopoulos’ recent exhibition, The Earth Is Flat, at MAMA Gallery in Los Angeles, the artist asks a very simple, but jarring question: will the machines take over. Ten years ago, this question still hovered in the wheelhouse of conspiracy theorist rhetoric and the fantasies of Terminator fans. Today, though, this question is more real than ever. The machines are getting smarter and advancements in artificial life technology having taken frightening leaps and bounds.

In Georgopoulos’ solo exhibition, the machines take on obvious forms – the skeleton of a vehicle, a refrigerator with a surveillance camera on top of it, and a welding robot from a defunct Detroit car manufacturing plant – the only edition added to the machine is a single channel video that projects a single human eye. Upon first impression, the works look scattered, remote, disconnected and without any inherent motivation, except for their frightening implications. However, it is only when you take a closer look that you realize the sinister interconnectedness of not only the works, but also a sense of ominousness.Part of this portentousness may be emanating from a separate room in the gallery, where a single sculpture gives off a thumping beat, much like a heart beat – bum-pum, bum-pum, bum-pum. You realize later that it is the artist’s heart beating in the machine that looms in the form of two black towers – it reminds you that one day we may all be immortal in the form of a machine. The piece, called Zeus, is perhaps the darkest and most prescient work of the show. Two 16:30 minute single channel videos repeats multiple lines of computer code. During a private dinner to celebrate the show, the artist reminisces about walking into a government building and seeing a similar thumping machine – a quantum computer – giving off the same dark and haunting vibe.

On another wall, you see what most familiarly looks like “art,” but from afar you’re not really sure. Organized in a fascinated Tetris-like grid, multiple photographs feature young women, some with beehive hairdos, walking hurriedly past vintage cars. Is it a film set? Are they prostitutes? Who are these “watchers” stealing these images? If you look even closer, you realize that were are at the intersection of Santa Monica Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue in Hollywood. It’s the 1960s, presumably. The series, entitled Human Behavior, comes from a series of found surveillance photographs – not much else is known and that is perhaps what is most powerful.Knowing the work and human behind the work, I can say with a fair amount of certainty that this is not the production of a frivolous tinkerer who wields and welds machines together with fancy abandonment. Nor is it the work of a conspiracy theorist – there is science behind what he does. The artist is obsessed with the theories of Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking. While most artists would turn to Picasso for their inspiration, Georgopoulos may turn to a science digest with the latest news that a new robot, a new machine and a smart algorithm has brought us one step closer to total annihilation.

The truth, though, is that the show has a completely different side to it. A sweeter, more saccharine side that is more beautiful than anything. It almost brings you to the future – after the machines have won. Realizing that all the works are neatly tethered by thousands of miles of wire, it gives you the sense that we are in a type of zoo for the machines. We have already learned to beat them. The war against AI has been won. It’s three hundred years from now. In the end, there is one thing that machines can’t give and that is love and compassion. While they are plugged in, there is warmth, but pull the cord and there is an eerie coldness. Inside of us is a real beating heart that can win all battles, which is the greatest message to take home from The Earth Is Flat.

Second Amendment by James Georgopoulos





















In the studio with James Georgopoulos a look into one of his "ELEMENT" pixel works on panel 2015























The entire process took about 1 month at the studio in El Segundo Ca.
First and the wood blocks are cut to the exact size, then the colors are mixed and the blocks are then painted with gesso then then the color is applied.
After all the blocks are painted sanded painted again and again its ready for final assembly. each pixel has a code and a number that matches the final image.
The pixel block are mounted with special glue and then the entire pixel work is covered in protective finishes.
James Georgopoulos Element pixel works are all handmade sculptures pieces

See more about this work HERE

Friday, August 12, 2016

recent works by James Georgopoulos

The Earth Is Flat, James Georgopoulos’ solo exhibition at the MAMA gallery. Buoyed by four new video sculptures that the artist created out of found, fabricated, and handmade materials, The Earth Is Flat is an interrogation of artificial intelligence (AI) and the values and hazards implicit to autonomous computing. The artist‘s four sculptures themselves are superficially interconnected to insinuate that technology has inculcated itself as an indissoluble event in human history.

The title of the exhibition emanates from the certainty that we are at a precipice, akin to the era when a flat world was the predominant theory about the form of the Earth. Theorists and technologists—Bill Gates, Elon Musk, and Stephen Hawking among them—believe that we are presumably in a technological stone age, and that AI will continue to develop rapidly and exponentially in spite of warnings and omens. The war-ready double-jointed Cheetah robots at Boston Dynamics; the machines will eventually turn on us, as the essential foundation of countless films—The Matrix, Terminator, Ex Machina—about AI; Hawking himself posits AI’s could wipe us all out: “Spelling the end of the human race.”

Continuing in the lineage of video-sculptural objects produced by Nam June Paik, Georgopoulos has created “Autonomous X12” from a chassis built exclusively by robots for the Nissan Motorsports race team. “Autonomous X12” is the third iteration of Georgopoulos’ series of automotive pieces embedded with or accompanied by film, each of which replicate the driving experience in real time. This dynamic piece takes the series a step further by kitting out the machine with a video that resembles the self-driving experience in Google’s Project X vehicle. The film, a voyage down Sunset Boulevard from the East Side of Los Angeles to Santa Monica on the West, can be taken as a mundane passage the likes of which your car might take without you when the technology is capable of self-driving programmable errands.

In “Weight Watcher,” Georgopoulos has retrofitted a vintage 1940s refrigerator with a closed circuit video system, coldly depositing the viewer onto a screen implanted inside the appliance. The “vintage sci-fi” console points to the development of “the internet of things,” wherein computers are constantly storing and compiling information about us—in order to better understand and function as service devices.

“Luddite” takes the form of an assembly line robot, but a screen bearing a single, watchful eye, gives it an air of a Big Brother-type information-gathering device. And finally, “Zeus,” a replication of a quantum computer (e.g. a D-Wave Systems computer) displays two video works; on each screen thousands of images flash dramatically interlaced within spooling computer code. The monolithic sculpture evokes Deep Blue, the IBM chess computer that beat Garry Kasparov in a 1996 match. Another work in the show, “Alpha,” references Google Deepmind’s AlphaGo computer, which handily beat Go game champion Lee Sedol at the complex strategy game.

In addition, two new series of works accompany the sculptures. In “Organ Donor” Georgopoulos appropriates discarded screens used to print circuit boards, and crafts LED-lit wall-hung multi-media pieces from them, further deconstructing technology down to its elemental form. With “Human Behavior” Georgopoulos presents a series of voyeuristic photographs of women taken with a telephoto lens from above the intersection of Santa Monica Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue in Hollywood in what appears to be the 1960s. Georgopoulos uses computer tape to stencil gold paint onto the found photographs, which he has hand-tinted. The photographer and Georgopoulos are together in a constant state of information building to different ends.



At the crux of the exhibition is this learning process—the infinite potential of AI to log data and synthesize understanding. Fixed on the inextricability of vulnerability from human progress, Georgopoulos’ sculptures expose a profound fragility in our impending and symbolic identity, one tangled with technology. Georgopoulos’ objects exist at the perceived liminal space between past and future, awash in a mysterious source of intelligence--the amount a computer can learn is an unknowable quantity. And if in his practice some sort of technological narrative looms, Georgopoulos’ sculptures find a resting point in a sociological vision of the future—the inducement of feelings, both anxious and optimistic, arises before any sort of conclusion.




rodeo drive by james georgopoulos




billionaires gold bars