October 26, 2021
Ai-Da the artist robot with her self-portraits. Photo by Lucy
Seal, courtesy the Design Museum and Aidan Meller.
The British robot artist Ai-Da was looking
forward to the opening of her first show in Egypt, until security forces denied
her entry into the country. She was detained at the Egyptian border for 10 days
ahead of her first exhibition. The issue? Officials suspected she was part of
an espionage plot—because, you see, Ai-Da is actually a robot.
That show, titled “Forever is Now,” is an annual exhibition organized by Art D’Égypte, a multidisciplinary firm whose mission is to support the Egyptian art and culture scene. Ai-Da’s inclusion in the show was supposed to be the main highlight.
The trouble reportedly started when Egyptian officials
noticed that Ai-Da had a modem and cameras for eyes. Because of the technology
within the robot, officials grew concerned that the artist-robot may have been
part of an espionage conspiracy. The Guardian reported that Egyptian
officials offered to exhibit the work with some of its gadgetry removed, but
dealer Aiden Meller, Ai-Da’s creator, insisted that the robot’s cameras could
not be taken out. The robot uses AI algorithms to turn what is recorded through
its camera into works of art.
“Let’s be really clear about this. She
is not a spy,” Meller said. “People fear robots, I understand that. But
the whole situation is ironic, because the goal of Ai-Da was to highlight and
warn of the abuse of technological development, and she’s being held because
she is technology.” He added: “Ai-Da would appreciate that irony, I think.”
Since her creation, Ai-Da has done events and exhibited at premier
institutions like Tate Modern, the Barbican Centre, the Design Museum in
London, and others. At the “Forever is Now” exhibition, Ai-Da is presenting her
work alongside pieces by artists like Alexander Ponomarev, Moataz Nasr, and Stephen Cox.
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