Data Alchemy: New exhibition on AI
The Collegium Helveticum opens an exhibition this weekend that is all about data, patterns and artificial intelligence.
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People often want to extract meaning or significance from patterns. Artificial intelligence has its own role to play in this respect, as it already helps us to recognise patterns and, at best, to make predictions and forecasts. While deep learning and artificial networks are often referred to as a black box, we also speak about “data alchemy”. The new exhibition Data Alchemy -Observing Patterns from Galileo to Artificial Intelligence at the Collegium Helveticum is an artistic and scientific exploration of artificial intelligence, which has attracted a great deal of attention in recent months due to the popularisation of large language models (LLM) such as ChatGPT.
"Blue Transmutations" is one of the works on view at the exhibition. It is a collaboration between artists Liat Grayver, Marcus Nebe and Robert Nissler from the Nanoparticle Systems Engineering Lab at ETH Zurich. Painter Liat Grayver uses Egyptian blue pigments on Japanese paper. The results are recorded with a special black-and-white camera at ETH Zurich. These images, in turn, are transformed into three separate montages by video artist Marcus Nebe and projected onto selected paintings, which have also been created using Egyptian blue on Japanese paper.
Data Alchemy – Observing Patterns from Galileo to Artificial Intelligence
The exhibition will take place at the Collegium Helveticum, Schmelzbergstrasse 25, 8006 Zurich, and can be visited from 9 to 24 June, Tuesday to Saturday, between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
The Collegium Helveticum is the joint institute of ETH Zurich, the University of Zurich and the Zurich University of the Arts.
Collegium Helveticum
The Collegium Helveticum was founded by ETH Zurich and is sponsored today by both ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich. ZHdK became a partner in 2016. The goal of the Collegium Helveticum is to foster mutual understanding between the humanities and social sciences, the natural sciences, engineering, medical science and the arts. As the only institute of its kind in Switzerland, the Collegium Helveticum aims to create intellectual space beyond the mainstream and the established paradigms within disciplines.