
Storm Time
New York (US)
Type
Venue
Greene Naftali
Curated by
Greene Naftali
Photo by
Dates
11/18/2016 - 01/07/2016
Greene Naftali is pleased to present Storm Time, an exhibition of new work by Katja Novitskova, the artist’s first with the gallery, and her debut solo exhibition in the United States. Culling from myriad sources online, Novitskova mines the Internet for images and data visualizations, often specific to scientific research and elusive to the eye. Leveling the anthropologically familiar with speculative projections of the future, she aims to synthesize retinal sight with that of machinic imaging. Rather than depicting the observable environment, Novitskova assembles various visual incarnations of data, which are collected by an immense number of sensors and cameras at the frontiers of human knowledge of the world. According to Novitskova, “today any image can serve as an informational diagram of something else, a triggering pattern, a dataset to be mined. The storm of data is brewing.” In the process of mapping this storm, life becomes mutated and augmented, as one organism’s body is channeled toward developing the future of another.
For her exhibition at Greene Naftali, Novitskova orchestrates an immersive environment in which non-human animal forms coalesce with machines. Novitskova’s aluminum dibond panels, native to advertising displays, depict model organisms like the roundworm (C. elegans), fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) and yeast (S. pombe) – species widely used in scientific research for their genetic commonalities with humans. Captured as enlarged microscopic photographs and computer generated renderings, the image-derived sculptures resemble a synthetic landscape, standing like vegetation throughout the space. Navigating this landscape are three apes, shot by an infrared camera in a light spectrum inaccessible to the human eye. The two largest aluminum panels in the show resemble oversized, slippery pink boulders. They are in fact images of protein structures – one from the single cell yeast species, the other from the human body – on which a fruit fly and a roundworm are superimposed.
In the rear gallery, robotic sculptures are stationed on aluminum trusses. Their bodies, gently swaying amid soothing sounds, are comprised of re-purposed electronic baby swings with patterned resin diaphragms for a cradle. Unlike their commercial counterpart, these have laser eyes that pierce through the space, quietly mapping their surroundings. Novitskova’s appropriation of white noise machines and baby swings – strange technological proxies for the comfort of the womb – both underline the nascency of machine consciousness, while also orchestrating an eerie prenatal environment inhabited by mutant forms.
Patterns in storms imagery are best recognized by the human eye, so we need your help processing these storms. Different formation morphologies often look quite
similar, which is one of the reasons algorithms can have such a hard time classifying these features. If you are in doubt, it is important that you follow your intuition and take a swift decision. Humans have the great ability to quickly integrate various levels of a spatial comparison, such as contrast, local features, global proportions, structures and geometries into a single judgment. Don't worry too much if you aren't 100% sure—we just want your best guess. Many people will see each formation, and everyone's classifications will be combined to produce a statistically significant result.
List of storm time features:
– data deluge
– model organisms
– fluorescent protein markers
– intersection of large datasets and universal scaling laws
– informational motives that characterize life
– any data matrix is a picture, or at least like a picture
– artifacts, blips, corals, power lines, whistles, noise
– gradients within the embryo, embryonic patterning
– birth of form
– pluripotency
– metabolic pathways
– in vivo morphogenesis
– mutants
– denatured proteins
– living machines
– filtering, mapping, pattern-matching, triggering
– storm surge