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When Guillermo del Toro compares Frankenstein to a careless tech bro and declares he'd rather die than use generative AI, you know we're in for something special. This accidental Halloween edition brings you dancing skeletons for science, pixels so tiny they've hit the absolute limit of human vision, and Indigenous artists staging unauthorized augmented reality interventions at The Met. Plus, waterfalls swallowing Chicago's skyline and real art world horror stories that'll make you appreciate how vulnerable creative work truly is.
00:00:25. Monsters, methods, and the meaning behind the making.
00:01:03 From Monsters to Mind-Bending Pixels.
00:02:29 Del Toro's Take on AI and Creative Tools.
00:04:45 The Limit of Human Vision: Tiny Pixels.
00:07:12 Truth and Perception in Photography.
00:12:11 Real-Life Art World Nightmares.
00:15:57 Creativity in Clinical Settings.
00:18:19 Indigenous Artists Reclaiming Narratives.
00:20:12 Artists Creating Their Own Reality.
00:21:13 The Intersection of Art and Technology.
Episode HighlightsGuillermo del Toro's Stand Against Generative AI - The acclaimed director makes a bold statement about choosing artistic integrity over algorithmic convenience, comparing Frankenstein to a careless tech bro and expressing his concerns about natural stupidity over artificial intelligence.
Retina E-Paper and the Limits of Human Vision - Swedish researchers achieve the theoretical maximum of display resolution with 25,000 pixels per inch, recreating Klimt's The Kiss on a surface smaller than a grain of rice. Yet we use this perfection to emulate the grain of analog photography.
Photo Oxford Festival: Truth in Photography - Under new director Katy Barron, the festival explores how photography both reveals and conceals reality, featuring Michael Christopher Brown's ethical use of AI to protect vulnerable subjects in his Cuba-Florida migration series.
Indigenous AR at The Met - On Indigenous Peoples' Day, 17 Native artists staged an unsanctioned augmented reality exhibition, overlaying colonial paintings with digital interventions that reclaim narrative space and challenge institutional storytelling.
About The IntersectThe Intersect explores the dynamic relationship between art and technology, offering nuanced analysis, case studies, and perspectives from practitioners working at this unique intersection. From analog methods to digital fabrication, generative design to interactive installations, we examine how computational tools shape creative work and how art pushes technology forward.
Subscribe to The Intersect newsletter at theintersect.art for weekly insights into how technology shapes artistic practice and creativity informs technological development.
By Juergen BerkesselWhen Guillermo del Toro compares Frankenstein to a careless tech bro and declares he'd rather die than use generative AI, you know we're in for something special. This accidental Halloween edition brings you dancing skeletons for science, pixels so tiny they've hit the absolute limit of human vision, and Indigenous artists staging unauthorized augmented reality interventions at The Met. Plus, waterfalls swallowing Chicago's skyline and real art world horror stories that'll make you appreciate how vulnerable creative work truly is.
00:00:25. Monsters, methods, and the meaning behind the making.
00:01:03 From Monsters to Mind-Bending Pixels.
00:02:29 Del Toro's Take on AI and Creative Tools.
00:04:45 The Limit of Human Vision: Tiny Pixels.
00:07:12 Truth and Perception in Photography.
00:12:11 Real-Life Art World Nightmares.
00:15:57 Creativity in Clinical Settings.
00:18:19 Indigenous Artists Reclaiming Narratives.
00:20:12 Artists Creating Their Own Reality.
00:21:13 The Intersection of Art and Technology.
Episode HighlightsGuillermo del Toro's Stand Against Generative AI - The acclaimed director makes a bold statement about choosing artistic integrity over algorithmic convenience, comparing Frankenstein to a careless tech bro and expressing his concerns about natural stupidity over artificial intelligence.
Retina E-Paper and the Limits of Human Vision - Swedish researchers achieve the theoretical maximum of display resolution with 25,000 pixels per inch, recreating Klimt's The Kiss on a surface smaller than a grain of rice. Yet we use this perfection to emulate the grain of analog photography.
Photo Oxford Festival: Truth in Photography - Under new director Katy Barron, the festival explores how photography both reveals and conceals reality, featuring Michael Christopher Brown's ethical use of AI to protect vulnerable subjects in his Cuba-Florida migration series.
Indigenous AR at The Met - On Indigenous Peoples' Day, 17 Native artists staged an unsanctioned augmented reality exhibition, overlaying colonial paintings with digital interventions that reclaim narrative space and challenge institutional storytelling.
About The IntersectThe Intersect explores the dynamic relationship between art and technology, offering nuanced analysis, case studies, and perspectives from practitioners working at this unique intersection. From analog methods to digital fabrication, generative design to interactive installations, we examine how computational tools shape creative work and how art pushes technology forward.
Subscribe to The Intersect newsletter at theintersect.art for weekly insights into how technology shapes artistic practice and creativity informs technological development.