This exhibition is a part of Gray Area's 15th anniversary programming focus on ACCESS.
ENGLISH | ESPAÑOL
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer:
TECHS-MECHS
A Survey of Mexican Technological Culture
March 16 - May 31, 2023
SAN FRANCISCO
Exhibition Details
March 16 - May 31, 2023
Tickets & Hours
Wednesday - Saturday 2PM - 9PM
Sunday 12PM - 6PM
Free for Mission Residents
Gray Area is proud to offer free admission for residents of San Francisco's Mission District, a historic center of the city’s Latinx and Mexican-American communities.
Gray Area
2665 Mission Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
At the heart of this landmark exhibition is the West Coast premiere of “Pulse Topology” (2021), a monumental, participatory installation that represents the culmination of Lozano-Hemmer’s most celebrated series of works activated by the human pulse, previously shown to great acclaim in Canada, Brazil, Switzerland and other countries. Composed of three thousand suspended light bulbs, each glimmering to the heartbeat of a different participant, the installation creates an immersive chorus of light and sound inspired by the classic Mexican film “Macario” (1960).
This exhibition also marks the North American premiere of “Recurrent First Dream” (2022), a generative animation made from the feminist, rationalist poem “Primero Sueño” written by the seventeenth-century Mexican writer Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz.
Recognizing the militaristic origins and policing applications of the technologies he uses, Lozano-Hemmer’s installations grant participants generative agency, thereby offering them the opportunity to subvert the operational logics of control and surveillance. “Inspired by Real Events” (2004) invites visitors to look into a surveillance camera enclosure to view an intervention in Mexico City led by the artist, where volunteers dismantled security cameras in emblematic public places like the Monumento a la Independencia. “Airborne Newscasts” (2013) is a large shadow play that uses the tracked body-heat of visitors to evaporate newscables arriving live from sources such as Notimex, La Jornada, Alternet, Fox News, Reuters and Agencia EFE.
The historical precedents informing the works in TECHS-MECHS help to reorient Silicon Valley narratives about innovation towards more inclusive interpretations of technology, considering past, and sometimes ancient, traditions of experimentation. Works like “Volute Zero” (2016), a 3D printed “speech bubble”, created from a tomographic scan of the air exhaled when speaking, was inspired by the fluid-dynamic speech volutes that indigenous civilizations, like the Mayan or Aztecs, inscribed in their scrolls and reliefs.
The show also includes kinetic sculptures that animate common-place objects. “Synaptic Caguamas” (2004) is an array of “Caguama”-sized beer bottles that spin on a Mexican “cantina” bar table, following patterns generated by cellular automata that simulate the neuronal connections of the brain. “Sway” (2016) is a noose that stands mysteriously inverted and that gently sways every time ICE arrests a person, like a metronome.
Throughout these works, technology is used as a means of reflexive intervention that encourages a questioning of identity both culturally and individually. In TECHS-MECHS, Lozano-Hemmer responds to these questions, not in the declarative, but in a dynamic interrogative; in doing so, he challenges prescribed notions of Latinx identity by complicating relationships between technologies, bodies, and borders. Linking diasporic networks across North America, TECHS-MECHS finds a welcome home at Gray Area in dialogue with San Francisco’s Mission District.
Crossroads: Art and AI
A TECHS-MECHS Closing Night Panel Discussion
Thursday, June 1, 2023
Celebrate the closing of TECHS-MECHS with Crossroads: Art and AI, a thought-provoking panel discussion that delves into the creative potential and challenges at the nexus of art and artificial intelligence.
Crossroads: Art and AI is presented by Immersive Arts Alliance, moderated by Vanessa Chang, and features Evo Heyning, Toshi Anders Hoo, and Bogdana (Bobi) Rakova. We look forward to sharing perspectives from three thought leaders in the field.
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer was born in Mexico City in 1967. In 1989 he received a B.Sc. in Physical Chemistry from Concordia University in Montréal, Canada. A media artist working at the intersection of architecture and performance art, Lozano-Hemmer creates platforms for public participation using technologies such as robotic lights, digital fountains, computerized surveillance, media walls, and telematic networks. Inspired by phantasmagoria, carnival, and animatronics, his light and shadow works are "antimonuments for alien agency".
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