The Citizen (KZN)

Canadian artist Rodriguez hacks AI tools for art

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Montreal – Canadian artist and academic Sandra Rodriguez, by hacking artificial intelligen­ce, hopes to demystify the novel technology topping the news of late, while showcasing its power and potential to brighten but also disrupt our lives.

In a dimly lit Montreal art space, visitors interact with her exhibit – an AI trained on millions of online searches for erotica that generates a mosaic of pornograph­ic videos that eventually mesh into a soup of abstract shapes.

Skin is shown as “uniformly light” and “smooth,” reflecting “what the AI sees most in current pornograph­ic videos”, explains Rodriguez, who used several generative algorithms to create the images that highlight “the social biases which exist in mass pornograph­y.”

A few months earlier, she had unveiled a conversati­onal bot inspired by American linguist Noam Chomsky, whose objective was to “demystify the secrets of AI” by chatting with the public, all in a virtual world.

“It is necessary today to create works of art that speak to the public about issues that will affect them tomorrow,” Rodriguez tells AFP, adding she aims to dispel fears, as well as the “somewhat unrealisti­c craze,” surroundin­g AI.

For her next project, the 40-something Rodriguez plans to mix artificial intelligen­ce with dance, a passion she has had since her childhood in Montreal, where she learned salsa at neighbourh­ood parties.

Initially trained in documentar­y cinema, she quickly used emerging digital media to find “new ways of telling human stories.”

At the same time, she developed a course of research on ways in which the public can reappropri­ate new tech tools and the resulting social impacts.

For seven years, she split her time between Montreal and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, where she taught the first course devoted to the production of immersive media.

Today, several of her works embody this duality and have earned award nods at festivals including Sundance and Ars Electronic­a in Linz, Austria.

Rodriguez has a strong “desire to break the limits of these technologi­es and to go beyond them, but in an intelligen­t way, to bring value,” says Eliane Achcar of Studio Normal.

For the artist, looking at technology through different lenses helps to reveal its flaws.

By relying only on content collected on the internet and on their own creations, generative AIs like Midjourney or Stable Diffusion that turn text prompts into images reduce “little by little creativity and the way of thinking differentl­y”, says Rodriguez.

Added to this is the question of plagiarism of the works on which these systems are based – an issue raised by several artists before the courts.

“We need to take breaks in the developmen­t of AI,” says Rodriguez, who has denounced the massive collection of data for several years. “Not so much because the systems are moving too fast, but because we don’t know who is using them, what data they are using.”

In 2015, Rodriguez was recognised for her work highlighti­ng abuses by technology companies in the DoNotTrack project, a documentar­y series produced by internatio­nal media.

“There is a real danger for us as citizens,” she warns. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? WORRISOME. Sandra Rodriguez poses for a portrait during an AI exhibition titled Sex, Desire and Data at the Centre Phi in Montreal, Quebec. Rapid developmen­ts in AI are causing concerns in Montreal, where leading computer scientists are grappling with the ethics of a potentiall­y apocalypti­c technology.
Picture: AFP WORRISOME. Sandra Rodriguez poses for a portrait during an AI exhibition titled Sex, Desire and Data at the Centre Phi in Montreal, Quebec. Rapid developmen­ts in AI are causing concerns in Montreal, where leading computer scientists are grappling with the ethics of a potentiall­y apocalypti­c technology.

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