Installation view © Coreana Museum of Art

Artificial intelligence (AI) lacks a body needed to perceive, feel, and understand the world. Instead, it relies on vast aggregates of technologies to gather, analyze, and organize information. This does not mean that machine intelligence is incompatible with organic intelligences—human, insect, plant, animal—and the landscapes they inhabit. In the rise of AI and of autonomous entities operating through it, we face the challenge of re-questioning the definition of intelligence beyond anthropocentric thought.

How might we regard landscape—as a vessel that contains distinctive, mysterious modes of existence—as a form of intelligence? How might such a view shift our perspective on intelligence so that humanity is repositioned not as the center but as one among many? Do natural beings grouped as “the earth”—insects, plants, animals—possess intelligence? And what relation does human-made AI, created through technological development, bear to the natural intelligences by which we have organized and evolved?


Installation view © Coreana Museum of Art

Starting from such questions, 《When Spider Spin Dusk》 examines, with a reflective and critical gaze, concepts traditionally considered “intelligence” and “systems of knowledge.” This research project learns through direct experience and sensorial encounter, and offers opportunities to live alongside intelligences other than the human.

Based on research and exchanges begun last June, the journey shared by artists and curators from Canada and Korea will be presented as an exhibition in January 2025.

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