Cn / Uk
Lawrence Lek
AIDOL 爱道
2019
HD video, stereo sound duration: 82 mins 40 secs
Lawrence Lek’s AIDOL 爱道 is feature-length film accompanied by a score written and orchestrated by the artist. The computer-generated fantasy tells the story of a fading superstar, Diva, who enlists an aspiring AI songwriter to mount a comeback performance at the 2065 eSports Olympic finale. Set in a smoke-and-mirrors realm of fantastical architecture, sentient drones and snow-deluged jungles, AIDOL revolves around the long and complex struggle between humanity and Artificial Intelligence. Fame – in all its allure and emptiness – is set against the bigger contradictions of a post-AI world, a world where originality is sometimes no more than an algorithmic trick and where machines have the capacity for love and suffering.
Produced using 3D rendering, gaming software and motion capture technology, AIDOL is the sequel to Lek’s 2017 film Geomancer. It builds on a sequence of CGI creations in which he draws upon the language of videogames, science fiction, music videos and corporate animations, among multiple other sources. The result is a shifting and seductive virtual reality, punctuated by Diva’s songs and an evolving soundtrack of electronic themes. In its multiplicity of references, AIDOL defies the concept of genre, engendering a fictional space that is alternately recognisable and alien. Both in setting and action, the story shifts between stylistic convention and uncanny beauty, as much as between real-world allusions and dazzling inventions (or both, as in the case of Diva’s hit song Deep Blue Monday, whose title refers to the 1990s computer that was a pioneering instance of AI – the first machine to beat a reigning world champion at chess).
Aspects of modern South-East Asia – from megabrands to super-casinos to cultural persecution and underground resistance – are allegorized into a futuristic otherworld. As in Lek’s previous works, Farsight Corporation is a controlling force in this universe. The global conglomerate, with its ubiquitous logo and vast temple-like headquarters, usurps the role and status of a political regime.
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Sunday: 13:00 and 16:30h
Tickets can be picked up at Cineteca’s box office on the same day, from one hour before the session starts (Two tickets maximum per person. Limited capacity).
The event of Diva’s comeback is an international tournament sponsored by Farsight – the eSports Olympics – staged in an airborne stadium whose shape mimics the company logo, and in which ‘Bios’ are pitted against ‘Synths’. This contest belies a more profound existential conflict between humanity and machines, a conflict which finds transient resolution in the meeting between Diva and the AI artist Geomancer.
As in previous works by Lek, the focus of AIDOL is both forwards and inwards – glancing dually at the future and the present. Contemporary anxieties and fixations – the rise of AI, the formulaic dictates of celebrity, the hegemony of global brands and technological giants – are refracted through a quixotic prism. Lek’s imaginary sphere may be read both as a shimmering utopia and as an automated, profit-driven and algorithm-propelled dystopia. Throughout, the dichotomy of ‘human’ and ‘AI’ is tested and dismantled. Far from simply reprising the narrative of humanity imperilled by machines, the story points to the rote and unthinking infatuations of human minds, and equally to the ability of conscious machines to aspire to beauty and knowledge.
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Lawrence Lek uses advancing technologies, such as computer-generated imagery, virtual reality, 3D animation and gaming software as well as installation and performance to simulate and develop digital environments described by the artist as ‘three-dimensional collages of found objects and situations.’ By rendering real places within fictional scenarios, his digital worlds reflect the impact of the virtual on our perception of reality.
Lawrence Lek (b. 1982, b. Frankfurt am Main) is an artist based in London, working in fields of virtual reality and simulation. He studied at Trinity College, University of Cambridge, the Architectural Association, London, and The Cooper Union, New York. He is currently presenting a major solo exhibition, Lawrence Lek: Farsight Freeport, at Haus der elektronischen Künste Basel, on view until November 2019.