An interdisciplinary research lab investigating the nature of intelligence, consciousness and planetary systems through research-based art that bridges embodied experience with emerging technologies.
We know that we are deeply entangled within complex, interdependent networks and assemblages of life, composed of and embedded within expansive scales of intelligence, unfolding across multiple boundaries of self.
It’s one thing to intellectually know this, but how can we feel it, in our bodies?
Knowledge about the magnitude of the problems we face doesn’t, on its own, create the mindset to solve them. How do we metabolize this into an embodied response?
Our practice weaves together ancient biotechnologies like poetry, dance, and ritual, with artificial intelligence, simulations, and generative systems—combining computational media with scientific research to create works that explore our understandings of multi-scale cognition, consciousness, and ecological awareness through felt knowledge. Responding to the severance brought on by modernity, and working toward reconnection to the living world, we employ technological mediation as a means of exploring embodied experience rather than escaping it.
Our work ranges from large-scale responsive installations and performances to online interventions and publications.
Investigating the intelligence of the universe, and our place in the evolving landscape of minds.
Exploring cognition and intelligence across biological, technological, planetary, and cosmic scales, across diverse substrates and collectives.
Challenging the boundaries of self, biology, geology, and technology, contemplating the whole planet as a living cyber-organism which exists across space and time.
Cultivating ecological and environmental awareness as embodied, cognitive, and cultural practices.
Understanding technology as an ecological process, an emergent force within Earth’s biosphere and geology.
Investigating consciousness, perception, awareness, and free will through artistic, scientific, and spiritual inquiry.
Examining how emerging technologies shape social structures, and culture, ethics, laws, and rituals — past, present, and future.
Merging ancient biotechnologies like dance, ritual, and poetry, with emerging technologies, AI, and responsive environments to explore new modes of embodied cognition and augmented spaces for co-creative expression.
Leveraging insights from neuroscience and etc such as embodied simulation.
See more at shows.
Memo Akten & Katie Hofstadter are Southern California based interdisciplinary artists, researchers, and collaborators whose work investigates the entanglements of technology, consciousness, embodiment, and culture. Merging backgrounds in dance, writing, poetry, drawing, sculpture, computer science, artificial intelligence, computational art, and public practice, they create speculative simulations, data dramatizations, immersive installations, and narrative experiments that probe the human condition in an age of artificial intelligence and accelerating transformation.
Memo Akten, originally from Istanbul, Turkey, is an artist, musician, and researcher whose practice bridges machine learning, consciousness, perception, and spirituality. A pioneer in artistic explorations of Deep Neural Networks, he holds a PhD in this topic from Goldsmiths, University of London, and is Assistant Professor at UC San Diego. His works have been exhibited worldwide, from the Shanghai Ming Contemporary Art Museum, to the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, to the Grand Palais in Paris, the Venice Biennale, and he is also a recipient of the Prix Ars Electronica Golden Nica.
Katie Hofstadter is a multidisciplinary artist, writer, and curator whose work investigates the complex relationships between embodiment, consciousness, and technologically mediated imagination. Her projects have been exhibited worldwide, and her writing appears in publications like Flash Art, BOMB, and The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. She is co-founder of global public art campaigns such as the ARORA network and the Climate Clock in NYC.
Together, their collaborative research and practice explore how emerging technologies—particularly AI and data systems—interact with the embodied, emotional, and ecological dimensions of human experience.