b. 1982, Frankfurt, Germany. Lives and works in London

Geomancer, 2017
HD video, stereo sound, 48’ 15”
© Lawrence Lek
Courtesy of the artist and Sadie Coles HQ, London
Commissioned for the Jerwood / Film & Video Umbrella Award

Lawrence Lek’s CGI fantasy Geomancer tells the story, set in Singapore in the year 2065, of an environmental satellite that wishes to become an artist. The film imagines the crisis that might happen when the world has become a techno-industrial complex run by a posthuman intelligence, and humanity is no longer considered special. In an automated world where algorithms dedicated to copying and studying massive amounts of data have appropriated every profitable human behavior, art could become the last refuge of humanity. But what will happen when an emotionally-aware AI gains the power of self-expression, and creative genius is no longer the domain of humanity? Lek's Geomancer, with its 3D animation and synthetic voice-over, seems to be an example of posthuman aesthetics: a visual and intellectual exercise anticipating the usurpation of creativity by AI. 

Drawing on his 2016 video essay Sinofuturism (1839–2046 AD), Lek’s u(dys)topian world reflects the growing geopolitical influence of the East, and cultural mutation of contemporary China. “Classic” Western futurism, with its rejection of the past and its cult of speed and production, gives way to the hopes and fears associated with AI and the nonhuman. Departing from conventional science fiction portrayals of human-machine relations, Lek explores the dynamic new era of sinofuturism, presenting it not as a manifesto or a call to action but as a conspiracy theory that allows us to better understand the complexities of today.

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