For over a century, architectural ornamentation has been dismissed as unnecessary, regressive, or economically impractical. But what if technology—the very force once blamed for its disappearance—could enable its return?
In this episode of AI Ignited, host Elif Baser is joined by Elif Deveci to explore whether artificial intelligence, robotics, and digital fabrication can reintroduce architectural detail in a meaningful way. The conversation revisits why ornament was abandoned during the Modernist movement, questioning the idea that cost alone drove its rejection and revealing the ideological shift that equated simplicity with progress.
Drawing on neuroscience, cultural history, and contemporary case studies—from robotic stone carving to algorithmically ornamented architecture —the episode examines how humans perceive detail, why ornamented environments may feel more “human,” and what is at stake when machines begin to participate in cultural production.
Ultimately, the discussion asks a deeper question: if ornament once served as a form of cultural encoding, can algorithms recreate meaning—or does that responsibility still belong to us?