
"At the Indianapolis Art Center, "Awakened Infestation: AI in Contemporary Art" presents a bold examination of the complex relationship between creativity and artificial intelligence. The exhibition encompasses a diverse range of art forms, including painting, ceramics, photography, weaving, and AI-assisted works. It highlights artists who are not only experimenting with new tools but also actively questioning the dangers associated with them."
"Rather than portraying art as a passive casualty of technological disruption, these pieces reflect the historical resilience of artists, who adapt, resist, and reinvent in the face of change. In a world flooded with machine-generated images, "Awakened Infestation" challenges viewers to sharpen their discernment and consider how uniquely human perception remains essential in defining what art means in the age of AI."
"This conversation-between human creativity and technology-is playing out not only on gallery walls but also in the very architecture of museums. Across the United States, a wave of tech-focused institutions is rewriting what cultural spaces can be. Forget hushed halls and static frames; these are multisensory playgrounds where projection mapping, motion sensors, and algorithm-driven design transform visitors from spectators into participants."
Multiple museums throughout the United States are exhibiting technology-related art to attract audiences of all ages and to resonate with younger generations. Exhibitions combine traditional media—painting, ceramics, photography, weaving—with AI-assisted works to probe the complex relationship between creativity and artificial intelligence. Artists experiment with new tools while questioning the ethical and cultural dangers posed by technological change. Pieces reflect artists' historical resilience, showing adaptation, resistance, and reinvention rather than passive casualtyhood. A wave of tech-focused cultural institutions is transforming museum architecture into multisensory playgrounds that use projection mapping, motion sensors, and algorithm-driven design. These interactive spaces and exhibitions challenge viewers to sharpen discernment and affirm uniquely human perception as essential to defining art in the age of AI.
Read at Psychology Today
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