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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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Kulendran Thomas presents a series of newly commissioned works at WIELS |
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Christopher Kulendran Thomas, 2024, Courtesy of the artist.
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BRUSSELS.- A pioneer of post-AI art, Christopher Kulendran Thomas has been using Artificial Intelligence technologies over the last decade to make genre-defying work that examines the foundational fictions of Western individualism. His paintings metabolise the colonial art history that came to dominate in Sri Lanka after his family, who are Tamil, left escalating ethnic violence there. Often these are shown with immersive video installations that remix propaganda and counter-propaganda into a cyclonic vortex of speculative scenarios. Safe Zone combines painting with auto-edited television to confront the historical mediums of soft power.
At WIELS Kulendran Thomas presents a series of small paintings and one very large one, together with a 24-screen video work, all of it newly commissioned. Abstracting the work of early Sri Lankan modernists like Justin Pieris Deraniyagala and George Keyt, Kulendran Thomas paintings are composed using a neural network trained on the colonial art history that was first brought to Sri Lanka by European settlers. These digital images are then hand-painted onto canvas and depict scenes from the beaches of Mullivaikkal, Sri Lanka perhaps from a debauched party, perhaps from a brutal massacre.
In Safe Zones first gallery, Kulendran Thomas paintings are illuminated by the warm glow of a spherical video work titled Peace Core (2024). Made together with long-time collaborator Annika Kuhlmann, Peace Core features television footage that was broadcast in the United States during a period of several minutes one particular morning many years ago. The work draws from the editing style of early corecore videos on TikTok, in which arbitrary video and music is combined for emotional affect, projecting meaning into meaninglessness. But the television footage featured in Peace Core is anything but meaningless it is from a morning in America that is carved into collective memory: 11th September 2001. This footage is continually algorithmically auto-edited into a hypnotic meditation, synchronised with an ever-evolving soundtrack composed using AI tools that keep remixing forever the sounds and music that were broadcast that morning.
Far away from Peace Cores seemingly anodyne American morning TV, Tamil Eelam Kulendran Thomas family homeland had been self-governed for several decades as a de facto independent state. But Eelam was wiped out in 2009 by the Sri Lankan government who were enabled by the global geopolitical shifts of the so-called War on Terror, in which totally unrelated independence movements around the world were re-labelled as terrorists following the 9/11 attacks on the United States.
Peace Core could be seen as a never-ending performance that infinitely extends a final suspended illusion of the end of history. Bathing in the warm light of this historical singularity is an exhibition that draws overlooked connections between the cultural legacies of the West and the violence that has followed in its wake, straddling three event horizons one that was seen in real time at the twilight of the broadcast era, another that occurred in its geopolitical aftermath but went largely unreported for years, and a third that we face now at the dawn of a technological convergence in the era of artificial intelligence.
Curator: Helena Kritis
Co-commissioned by WIELS, FACT Liverpool and Artspace Sydney.
This work began as a way for me to process my relationship to the conflict in Sri Lanka, and its colonial pretext, through my relationship with art itself what art does and how it proliferates.
To me the AI tools I use are just that tools. Making art about AI that simply illustrates or fetishizes the technology would miss how genuinely transformational these technologies are, which is both subtler and more profound than the look of generated content. I think the widespread ubiquity of AI technologies is bringing about a shift in perception that will transform some of the foundational institutions of our civilization, including our linear conception of time, the historical myths that our nation states are based on, and the Western idea of the individual as the basic unit of society. - Christopher Kulendran Thomas
Christopher Kulendran Thomas is an artist, of Tamil descent, who spent his formative years in London after his family left escalating ethnic oppression in Sri Lanka. He saw, mostly from a distance, how Sri Lankas colonial past continued to shape its art scene and began examining the entangled processes by which art and reality produce each other. Now working with advanced technologies across myriad disciplines, the artists studio is a fluid collaboration that brings together technologists, architects, writers, journalists, designers, musicians and activists from around the world.
Kulendran Thomas work is represented in major collections like that of The Museum of Modern Art in New York and solo exhibitions of his work have been held at Kunsthalle Zürich (2023); KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2022); Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2022); Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin (2019); Institute for Modern Art, Brisbane (2019); Spike Island, Bristol (2019); and Tensta konsthall, Stockholm (2017). Kulendran Thomas work has been included in the 5th Timișoara Biennial (2023); the 2nd Front Triennial, Cleveland (2022); the 7th Bi-City Biennale, Shenzhen (2017); and the 11th Gwangju Biennale, the 9th Berlin Biennale, and the 3rd Dhaka Art Summit (all 2016).
Annika Kuhlmann is a curator who works predominantly through longterm collaborations. In 2024, together with artist Christopher Kulendran Thomas and writer Dean Kissick, she founded Earth, a new art space in New York City. Previously she ran Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin, together with Nina Pohl and worked as a curator at Berlins Gropius Bau and Haus der Kulturen der Welt. She is also Creative Director at 0001 (previously New Eelam), an ongoing architecture project that she cofounded with Christopher Kulendran Thomas.
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