Description
Media: neuronal network processing, algorithmic processing, llm;
About the collection:
Pixel-powered mischief wrapped in museum-grade disrespect.
Rules don't apply to art, as they never have.
In this mind-shattering, culture-defining, oh-god-oh-no-what-have-we-done moments, in this paradigm-destroying, retina-melting scenes, the fine art world locks eyes with AI to realise it just got seduced by a calculator on steroids.
„NO RULES APPLIED“ performs the collision of digital creation and traditional art world rituals, documenting a moment when everyone grapples with change and institutions attempt to shake hands with AI, only to realise AI doesn’t have hands. Auction priests perform white-glove séances over temperature-controlled USB sticks, murmuring incantations about „provenance“ while quietly hoping no one asks what a smart contract actually does. Everyone wonders, deep down, if they’re getting scammed, as museum curators declare national emergencies over „The ethics of jpeg ownership“. Galleries rubber-stamp „avant-garde“ onto anything that looks vaguely cyberpunk, and buyers, bless their hearts and kiss their eyes, fling money at the void, hoping it comes back as gentrified asset manifested through culture.
Some collect digital art because they believe in the future. Some collect because they’re terrified of being left behind. Some collect because they think it makes them look better. Some collect because their synapses need to be tickled from time to time. But most collect because someone told them it was a good investment. They screenshot the purchase, post it online, and pray the number goes up. Nobody is really sure what they own, but as long as it costs more tomorrow, who cares?
Meanwhile, traditional artists stare at their paintbrushes like they just found out they were a long-running prank, wondering if they should’ve spent the last decade learning Python instead of perspective. AI artists? Generating game-changing, soul-crushing, auction-smashing, generational-wealth-altering masterpieces while literally unconscious. Critics, drenched in sweat, frantically try to decide whether art is dead, undead, or just in a particularly ironic coma. And art handlers? Now wearing gloves to carry hard drives filled with pixels worth more than their organs on the black market.
But hey, maybe this is fine. Pixels are just zeros and ones and rules are just stories we tell ourselves to make sense of the chaos.