Metempsychosis ex Machina

Theodore Koterwas (Artist), Emma Snellgrove (Artist), Atul Kumar (Artist)

Research output: Non-textual formPerformance

Abstract

As human bodies become increasingly entangled with technology, how do we maintain agency, creativity and empathy? In this performance, choreographers/dancers Emma Snellgrove and Atul Kumar interact physically with an artificial intelligence and a live musician (Theodore Koterwas), stimulating novel creative expression and bodily entrainment between them. The performers and AI are connected in a feedback loop via sound and tactile sensation through a floor fitted with a matrix of tactile transducers. Processing the dancers' movements, the AI filters and manipulates the sounds Theodore produces and feeds them back as audio and tactile sensations, influencing the humans' subsequent creative actions through proprioception, interoception and muscle memory. The hype (and fears) around Creative AI focus on its material outputs: images, stories, melodies, etc., but the value of any creative work lies in the relationship it creates between people. This performance integrates AI into the meeting of creative bodies. It generates a model for musicians and dancers to perform with AI rather than be replaced by it, embracing the uniquely human aspects of embodied performance. More broadly it reasserts the value of human creativity and human bodies at a time when society is grappling with the wonders and dangers of AI and feeling overwhelmed by the pace of change.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationInspace
Publication statusPublished - 2023
EventMetempsychosis ex Machina -
Duration: 3 Nov 20233 Nov 2023

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Artificial intelligence
  • Dance
  • Music
  • choreography
  • Deep Reinforcement Learning
  • Tactile feedback
  • Haptic feedback

Type (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Dance
  • Music
  • Digital art: design

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