Computer. 386DX

Aleksey Shulgin

1998
Open storage
  • Category
  • Medium
    Monitor, computer case, keyboard, speakers, software
  • Dimensions
    variable
  • Сollection
  • Inventory number
    МСИГ_ОФ_16
  • Acquired from
  • Year of acquisition
    2024

Keywords

About the work

Alexei Shulgin is a pioneer of net art and early computer art. His key work 386 DX was “the world’s first cyberpunk band, a singing computer based on the Intel 386 DX microprocessor, which became available in 1985 and by the time of the making of the work was considered outdated.

The members of the band are the components of a system unit: a 40 MHz chip, 8 Mb of RAM, a 40-Mb hard drive, a Creative Soundblaster 16 sound card, and the operating system Windows 3.1.

To create the vocals, Shulgin used existing MIDI files and manually programmed the musical notation using TextAssist text‑to‑speech software to create the effect of real singing, producing huge text files. Recording an album this way took about a year.

The band has played in Russia, Europe, and the USA, some¬times as a street performer in museums, metro stations or outside in the rain, hiding under an awkward umbrella, and took part in live audiovisual concerts with the artist.

In creating such performative situations, Shulgin is com‑menting on the nature of algorithmic (and artistic) labor, the autonomy of computing systems, the problem of obsolescence in technology, and the reproduction of images (and sounds) in popular culture. These questions remain relevant today, when neural‑network‑based generators imitate human creativity, making various communities‑from developers and politicians to creative industries and artists- revisit questions of authorship and labor ethics.

About the artist

  • Aleksey Shulgin

    Year of birth: 1963
    • VIAF 284710816
    Alexei Shulgin was born in Moscow. He graduated in Cybernetics of Metallurgical Processes from Moscow State Institute of Steel and Alloys. He is the founder of the Immediate Photography Group (1987). Beginning in 1997, he was one of the first people in Russian making Internet art. In 1998, he founded the cyberpunk rock group 386 DX. In 2004, together with Aristarkh Chernyshev, he created the project Electroboutique. Selected solo exhibitions: Televisions, XL Gallery, Moscow (1994); Beauty Inside, XL Gallery, Moscow (2005); Montage, Moscow House of Photography (2002); KRITI‑POP (with Aristarkh Chernyshev), Moscow Museum of Modern Art (2008). Selected group exhibitions: I Believe!, Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow (2007); Futurology, Garage Centre for Contemporary Culture, Moscow (2010); 4th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art (as part of the group Electroboutique), ARTPLAY Design Center, Moscow (2014). He is a winner of the Kandinsky Prize in the nomination Media Art. Project of the Year (with Aristarkh Chernyshev, 2009).