Next year, Los Angeles will be home to the world’s first museum for AI-generated art. The museum, named Dataland, will be located at The Grand in Downtown LA. It’s being led by Refik Anadol, a well-known figure in the AI art world.
The 20,000-square-foot museum will showcase and preserve artwork created by artificial intelligence. Anadol describes it as a “living museum” made of pixels and voxels, unlike any other art museum.
Refik Anadol, a Turkish-American artist, has previously had his works displayed at places like the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York and the United Nations. His famous piece, Unsupervised, is a constantly changing artwork that uses MoMA’s vast collection of images as data to create something new in real-time. Anadol uses ethically sourced data from respected collections like the Smithsonian and the Natural History Museum in London. He calls his AI model the “Large Nature Model,” which runs on renewable energy from Google’s servers in Oregon.
The museum will test whether AI-generated art can be recognized as a serious art form. It will stand alongside some of LA’s most important cultural sites, like the Museum of Contemporary Art. Though some critics have dismissed Anadol’s work as over-hyped, his exhibits consistently attract large audiences.
Anadol believes that AI is more than just a tool. He argues that artists should create their own AI models, saying that relying on pre-built models isn’t enough. “I collect my own data, train my own model,” Anadol explains. “I am co-creating with the machine at every step.”
Source: petapixel