OPEN CALL FOR 2121







A time capsule for year 2121

Welcome to the 3rd call for Expo 2121!

An open call is made each year for this exhibition, which is to be unveiled in the year 2121.

In 2121 none of us are here presumably. Given this time frame people are encouraged to think long-term since there is little gain nor much retroactive effect with a time span longer than life. The frame can help us reflect on what we are now. In relation to this open call, there are no self-reinforcing incentives, no money, nothing to look forward to, nothing to show off.

A group of curators review the contributions each year. These reviews are documented for posterity and made available. With these yearly discussions the time capsule is not hermetically sealed.

This is an open invitation to the year 2121. You are invited to contribute with ideas, works, or projects that could be of interest to a future audience. The contributions will not be public until the expo in 2121. Until then the contributions, titles, and artists' names are anonymized and referred to by an entry number in the annual review documents. A contribution might be reviewed several times through the century by a changing curator group. The reasons for an anonymized and indirect exposure via through curatorial comments only is two-fold: It gives the public something to grab onto during a century of suspense; and limiting the viewing to a few curators transforms the artist's perspective and deemphasizes vanity.

This invitation is also addressed to robots and machines.


Submission to 2121


Submit your contribution here

Deadline for participation: December 31, 2023.

Expo 2121


Annual reviews

2021
Curated by Andy Deck, Bjørn Magnhildøen, and Zsolt Mesterhazy

2022
Curated by Konstantina Mavridou and Joubin Zargarbashi


171 contributions have so far been submitted to Expo 2121.


Collaboration


The Expo 2121 open call is part of The Wrong Biennale 2023/24.
The Expo 2121 will be premiered at the 54th edition of The Wrong Biennale (2121/22).

Template questions

What would be interesting for an audience in 2121?
Would they rather look back to those who looked forward to them again?
How does it involve the present?
What is to be communicated - the human witness, the truth?
Is it reasonable to assume that truth is the most durable, that which will have value beyond ourselves?
Not only objective scientific truth or facts, but human, experienced truth, simple and sincere?
Or things we'd rather like to postpone and project into the future, or cover over from the past?
How to we relate to the ever-dramatic narratives of the future?
Could we build what the germans used to call a "giftschrank" - a poison cabinet that contains dangerous ideas and works that should still be preserved and available under certain circumstances?
What about dead media, the unreadable future?
What when we know our guesses will be wrong, and not even wrong?
Are we able to project ourselves, and not only reflect on what is important now?
Possible hashtags #art, #future, #ai, #post-human, #exhibition, #century, #group, #show? Can we avoid thinking of AI, QM, virtuality, multiverse, neuroscience, robotics, bio art, climate, space?
Will humans change, not to say improve, or are we rather entering the post-human, whatever this means?
How will the artist fare when AI now also could mean Artistic Intelligence?
Freedom, critique?
Will nature reveal more things to us?
Can we also imagine the development of a "theoretical artist" in the direction of how a theoretical physicist works?
Can art and science find meeting points since we believe what we see and since we see what we believe?
Should the dissemination of the projects be able to draw attention to speculative, if not spectacular, aspects of reality through the counter-intuitive but well-known concept of time travel?
Body and mind as lived life, our common phenomenology, a focal point of all actual, possible and impossible realities?
The alternation between subjective and objective perspective?
Of disregard?
Since we can't look very far, and increasingly shorter it seems, the questions we ask might be just as important as any answer.


Asking for a friend

Does the show require a live and sentient audience, human or otherwise?
This has to be open. It's reasonable to envision a machinery audience, so artists were guided to consider creating art for machines, whether they like the scenario or not. Art for machines may be a thing as time goes by.

Will the project's domain name be purchased for 100 years?
Someone will have to inherit it to maintain its public presence. Probably it will need to migrate many times. Recording the transitional dimension of it with notes will be important for maintaining the history of expo2121. Saving everything seems like the best policy since nobody knows what will be useful in 2121.

Will it be as easy for machines to play dumb as humans to play intelligent?
One could suspect that our unconscious would be hard to simulate, though so far it seems the easiest part, which begs the question why we are stuck in dreaming dreams. How far away is AI dream-therapy for directing the show? And what is a dream without bugs?

Where will the audience be? Where will the show take place? Intergalactic? Mars only? On low-orbit satellite? On earth? At sea? On dry land?
This and other things are speculative at present. Suggestions for maintaining the feasibility of the exhibition in 2121 can be proposed by future curators. Bury it in the desert? Throw it into a lava stream? Future collaborators will have to let circumstances guide them.

What would be interesting for an audience in 2121? Would they rather look back to those who looked forward to them again? How does it involve the present? What is to be communicated - the human witness, the truth? Is it reasonable to assume that truth is the most durable, that which will have value beyond ourselves?
This requires not only objective scientific truth or facts, but human, experienced truth, simple and sincere, things we'd rather like to postpone and project into the future, or cover over from the past. What happens when this elastic breaks? We can build what the Germans used to call a Giftschrank, a poison cabinet that contains dangerous ideas and works that should still be preserved and available under certain circumstances.


About

Expo 2121 is an initiative from noemata.net, an artist-driven production site organising exhibitions, festivals and biennales, often in collaboration with international partners.

Open call 2121 is made with help from Arts and Culture Norway, fund for interdisciplinary affairs.


Contact: noemata@gmail.com



Obligatory meme