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Human-non-human: the speculative robot

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:10 authored by Jondi Keane, Charles AndersonCharles Anderson
In this paper we explore and unpack the implications and issues arising from our exhibition project Technics and Touch: Body-Matter-Machine, which tested the limits of human and robot proficiencies through a series of experimental scenarios. The project explored methods of producing feedback systems through perception and action cycles. The exhibition consisted of two parallel events: a laboratory space where the artists were "in-residence," producing drawings in conjunction with the robot; and a procedural drawing exhibition in an adjoining space, where the outcomes of this human/nonhuman team were exhibited alongside the work of practitioners who have been exploring rule-based drawing for some time. The aim was to make and to discuss approaches to embodied, expanded and autonomous intelligent systems. Towards that end, we worked to articulate a range of ideas that emerged from the project: the expanded space of the robot, which includes a complex human-non-human set of relationships that imprint upon the newly created network of the human-non-human (a better if more cumbersome word for the expanded space we currently call "robot") and, the notion that this expanded space of the "robot" introduces a set of response parameters that were not aimed at duplication or fabrication but at exceeding the critical frameworks that filter and reduce what counts as "real." This makes the robot-system, Ela, a speculative robot, one that is thoroughly embedded in this process of co-creation.

History

Journal

Transformations

Issue

29

Start page

70

End page

87

Total pages

18

Publisher

Central Queensland University

Place published

Rockahmpton, Australia

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006073118

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-05-22