Refik Anadol hopes to demystify AI and look beyond the “shiny pixels” of generative art

In his latest epic feat of research and data collection, if you’re just seeing pretty pictures you’re not looking hard enough, says the artist.

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Date
21 February 2024

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Artist and technologist Refik Anadol is easily one of the best known AI artists around – but he isn’t just jumping on a bandwagon – he’s played a huge part in getting that bandwagon moving. Since 2016, the artist’s LA-based studio has been exploring the possibilities of AI art, producing custom machine learning algorithms to train AI to make visually entrancing pieces commissioned by galleries and institutions the world over. Though with great fame comes criticism. His work is divisive, and not to everyone’s taste, but meeting the artist at his latest show, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, it’s apparent that the artworks – epic, hypnotic, and utterly Instagrammable though they are –  serve as posters for the real star of the show: the Large Nature Model.

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Refik Anadol, Artificial Realities: Coral, 2023. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studios

“This artform needs more than beauty. I’m doing my best to share more.”

Refik Anadol

Obviously an algorithm isn’t going to bring in the crowds, but this is where Refik has found his niche. The exhibition at London’s Serpentine North features three recent artworks by Refik, real-time generative artworks of flora, fungi and fauna, accompanied by immersive sounds and smells, all made using his studio’s so-called Large Nature Model algorithm (a play on the term Large Language Model), which aim to provoke new perspectives and conversations on nature and climate change. His artworks are at times grand, mesmerising, satisfying to watch; other times the aesthetic is still very typical of current AI: swooshing, crashing waves of goo and impossibly perfect splats of paint in ice cream colours. Nevertheless, these pupil-dilating artworks do bring the crowds in, and, in tandem, the show aims to demystify AI and the process behind making such a project – to make it accessible and encourage others to use it.

“The largest work in this exhibition is the data wall,” Refik tells me. When you first walk into the gallery and adjust your eyes to the darkness, you are first greeted by this huge data wall, which you could (and I did) spend more time examining than the entirety of the rest of the show. It explains what the Large Nature Model is, but mostly the data it was fed: 4.5 billion images of coral reefs and rainforests, 25,000 sounds of bird songs, and half a million scent molecules, all ethically sourced from months of firsthand research by the studio (Refik himself lived in the rainforest for three months to research this project), data from the Smithsonian Institution and London’s Natural History Museum, and freely accessible online imagery. “We are witnessing the raw data, demystifying the source of knowledge,” Refik continues. “You can see where the data comes from, how we collected it, how we built the AI from scratch. This artform needs more than beauty. I’m doing my best to share more.”

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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

It’s a living archive, the first open source generative AI model dedicated to nature, and is still growing as new data partners (universities, museums, libraries, etc.) are enlisted. The generative artworks themselves will also change as the exhibition goes on. On the screen it states: “The Large Nature Model is not just a technological feat, it’s an ode to the wonders of our natural world, a bridge between the physical and digital, and a tool that promises to inspire, educate and mesmerise.”

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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

The word bridge comes up a lot with Refik. He wants to bridge the gap between AI and the public, between tech and nature, but he’s also become a bridge between a sceptical art crowd and the potentials of AI technology. He probably spends nearly as much time explaining to cynical journalists and confused patrons how AI models work, as he does actually making the work. As such, Refik represents the antithesis of exclusionary art world gatekeepers, speaking artistic babble no one ever says in everyday conversation. He wants everyone to understand and be excited by AI art’s possibilities, and use it to promote discussion and collaboration for good causes – in this case saving underwater and rainforest ecosystems.

When I ask him if he ever considered simply putting photographs of actual coral on the big screens, he tells me some of the generated images “aren’t just shiny pixels” but in fact functional – they have been 3D printed and placed in the ocean by researchers trying to make a new ecosystem where real coral is dying. “I’m trying to find a common place where shiny aesthetics but also the scientific, tangible and functional can meet,” he explains. The studio has also raised millions using AI (through commissions and selling NFTs) which it is putting back into communities, such as the rainforests the team visited. “AI can have a tangible impact. It’s important to remember it’s not just about extracting data. If you just see shiny pixels, it’s just the surface, the depth is much beyond.”

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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Image: It’s Nice That.

“I’m trying to find a common place where shiny aesthetics but also the scientific, tangible and functional can meet”

Refik Anadol
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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

Refik is a vocal advocate for open-source culture and using technology and research to make a difference beyond gallery walls, which this show exemplifies. The Large Nature Model is open source, because, as Refik tells me, he “comes from an open source culture. I learned AI through open source culture. So it’s our gift back to humanity. Anyone can access it, researchers can download and play and break it. The future of AI needs open source.”

To that end, this show is free to visit, not to mention a feat of scale and technology – the huge screens envelop the space and your peripheral vision, making it dazzling, social media heaven. Yes, the aesthetic can feel familiar at points, and arguably less impressive than real-life nature – but actual nature is dying, and that’s the point. As Refik puts it: “Nature is the most intelligent technology we have. We have to learn to respect it and protect it.”

Refik Anadol: Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive is open until 7 April 2024 at Serpentine North gallery in London.

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Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

Above

Refik Anadol, Echoes of the Earth: Living Archive, 2024. Installation view, Serpentine North. Photo: Hugo Glendinning. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studio and Serpentine.

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Refik Anadol, Artificial Realities: Coral, 2023. Courtesy Refik Anadol Studios

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About the Author

Jenny Brewer

Jenny is online editor of It’s Nice That, overseeing all our editorial output. She was previously It’s Nice That’s news editor. Get in touch with any big creative stories, tips, pitches, news and opinions, or questions about all things editorial.

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