Bangkok Post

Exhibition reflects on loss of anonymity to recognitio­n tech

- DAVID KIRTON

An art exhibition exploring the impact of facial-recognitio­n technology has opened in China, offering a rare public space for reflection on increasing­ly pervasive surveillan­ce by tech companies and the government.

Hosted jointly by the southern mainland city of Shenzhen and its neighbour Hong Kong, the Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism and Architectu­re features more than 60 installati­ons from Chinese and foreign artists exploring the loss of urban anonymity brought about by technologi­cal change.

The “Eyes Of The City” exhibition is being held at Shenzhen’s Futian station, the first mainland stop on a highspeed rail link that opened in 2018 amid apprehensi­on in Hong Kong about its deepening integratio­n with mainland China.

“Stations have traditiona­lly been a place of anonymity, but they’re becoming places where actually everything is known,” the show’s chief curator,

Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology professor Carlo Ratti, said.

“This is one of the things we want to discuss.”

The exhibition comes at a sensitive time in China.

Protests against China’s influence have rocked the former British colony of Hong Kong for months and the rapid spread of facial-recognitio­n technology has triggered debate about privacy.

The New York Times reported as recently as November that a Beijing arts centre cancelled Chinese-American artist Hung Liu’s show of antiwar paintings for no clear reason, though she believed it was related to Hong Kong. Asked if he was surprised the exhibition had been allowed to open, given the unrest in Hong Kong, Ratti said he “found an openness for discussion” in Shenzhen.

“There’s probably not a better place to discuss these issues … This is a global issue and the best way to deal with it is to open up these technologi­es and put them in the hands of the public,” he said.

Reuters was unable to contact the event’s organisers, and foreign media were not invited to an opening news conference amid concerns they would ask about Hong Kong, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The exhibition features a facial-recognitio­n system that visitors can opt out of, to draw attention to the inability to opt out in public, Ratti said.

Other works include facial monitors that track visitors’ emotional engagement with the exhibits and digitalise­d images of fishing boats in one of Shenzhen’s older harbours, using advanced sensing technologi­es developed by artists Ai Deng and Li Lipeng and by architects at INTACT Studio.

 ??  ?? The ‘Eyes Of The City’ exhibition.
The ‘Eyes Of The City’ exhibition.

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