The Futurelab and the lunchbreak
If you ever wanted to know how the smart people from the Futurelab spend their lunchbreak: They are sitting in the sun, eating pizza. Bon appetit!
Festival for Art, Technology and Society
Linz, 31.8. - 6.9.2011
If you ever wanted to know how the smart people from the Futurelab spend their lunchbreak: They are sitting in the sun, eating pizza. Bon appetit!
Imagine that you’re a shell. You speak and you laugh and you cry and you spit, but you’re only issuing orders. You’re in a command center controlling a robot. Who are you? Would you be a robot or would you be a human being? Who says that this isn’t exactly the way you function now? Who says that you don’t have a connection, an external hookup to yourself? And the body that you perceive with your senses isn’t your body at all, but rather a lifeless shell that you fill with life through the actions that you input?
At this point, a lot of people are going to say: “Hey, wait a minute! Of course we know who we are. After all, we can cut ourselves open and show that we bleed.” So what. What if we’re a bleeding machine?
And what about the soul? Maybe that’s what could be called a command center. Maybe we can swap bodies, tap into another life?
Dismissing questions like this as absurd is relatively simple, so let’s put this in more concrete terms. For quite some time now, Ishiguro has been tinkering with robots, with humanoids, with androids. He’s gone so far that he’s now recreated himself as a robot, and the similarities are astonishing. Now, image the following: You can control this robot; you hear what it hears and see what it sees; it speaks with your voice and with your facial expressions (you’re being filmed and your expressions are applied to the robot’s face). So, what’s your body now? Which body interacts with its surroundings?
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-tTS7Ze85o
Hiroshi Ishiguro presents the Geminoid IH-1 at the Ars Electronica and talks about his ideas
Or imagine that a person you’re very close to is controlling this robot, and you’re having a conversation with this person. She’s unmistakably saying what she always says, and she also somehow looks like she does, she sounds exactly the same, but it’s just not her. Or is it? How would you react if, all of a sudden, she kissed somebody else?
A play is being performed in the New Cathedral, it was written by Ishiguro and Oriza Hirata. The cast is an actress and an android. The audience isn’t told which is which—to avoid spoiling the suspense. Boundaries begin to blur. We’re approaching Ishiguro’s objective—namely, humanizing robots, interacting with them as if they were just like us. And perhaps we’ll soon no longer have to put receptionists through the ordeal of working tedious night shifts.
This play also raises fascinating questions, ones that urge theatergoers to subject their own perceptions to a bit of suspicious scrutiny. Those who dare to do so should definitely not miss this spectacle.
Landstraße, in the middle of town, main artery, and it’s buzzing. The day starts, people come to the streets, the origin of the day wakes them up and pushes them. You will come across the Landstraße quite often during the festival, it connects the Neuer Dom with the Hauptplatz.
KISS ME LINZ is a miniseries showing Linz and the locations of Ars Electronica 2011. Enjoy!
Trinity Column, Mainsquare. A war, the plague, a fire, Linz avoided or survived all this, that’s something to celebrate. And because people knew how to remember things, they did, and the column is going to watch over the Ars Electronica as well.
Since its very inception, Ars Electronica has been active at the interface of art and technology, dealing with things that are multilayered, that attract looks and double-takes, that confront us with cool innovations and, not infrequently, radical new ways of seeing both odd and everyday phenomena. And, happily, Ars Electronica isn’t alone in this pursuit. Now, an exhibition is showcasing one of the other institutions taking similar approaches: Tsukuba University.
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On https://ars.electronica.art/cyw2011/en/2011/05/16/erste-projekte-und-ideen-furs-festival/you can get a first impression on some of the projects of this year’s youthfestival-premiere. Enjoy!
The Enterprise had one, Luke Skywalker had two, and Professor Hiroshi Ishiguro copied himself. Whereas C3PO and R2D2 represented, in purely visual terms, rather rudimentary examples of their kind, Data made a bit more of an effort to resemble us. And then came Geminoid, which stopped us in our tracks to consider for at least a few seconds who—or actually what—it actually is that we’re dealing with here. Why is Geminoid also the coolest of the above-mentioned creatures?
Because it’s genuine. Deceptively real.
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Today Ariane Koek paid us a visit at the Ars Electronica Center. She’s responsible for merging arts and science at CERN. If you’re curious what this looks like, go to the arts@cern-website and be amazed. Also her work in the artsfield is impressive, go check it out on http://wwwbeautyquark-beautyquark.blogspot.com/ .
The first details we’re talked about, the first speeches are in the pipe, and we are looking very much forward to the collaboration to come.