Extinct Memories

10 September - 18 October 2015
Extinct Memories

Exhibition by Grégory Chatonsky and Dominique Sirois

In a few thousands of years, when humanity has become extinct, something will dig the soil of the Earth and find a datacenter. Miraculously, it will have access to the contents of these hard drives and try to reconstruct the traces of our world.

"Extinct Memories is the follow-up to Télofossiles, which we developed with Dominique Sirois in 2013-14 in Taipei, and in 2015 in Beijing. This joint project is part of a series of speculative fictions on extinction.

If we assume that species are born and die, we can be sure that the human species will also disappear, even if we don't know the time and conditions. They won't necessarily be the product of human activity, as a certain anthropocentric ecology can have us believe; and we might not be able to fight against it, as Ray Kurzweil's transhumanism hopes. We thus can imagine earth without us: what will remain after the last human disappears? How will a non-human sensory system piece together what we have been, based on fossil records left by our species.

If Télofossiles imagined an archaeological of consumerism, Extinct Memories addresses the way we record our memory today. In a few thousands of years, the non-human discovers a Google datacenter and manages to access the data stored on its hard drives. It contains interwoven stories and History, romantic meetings and breakups, Shanghai stock market value, all kind of invoices, murmurs on Skype, etc. The non-human will thus have access to traces of our psyche and quantities of other things. All those signs will be equidistant from each other, as laid flat. The Web is therefore not regarded as a mean of communication between human beings, but as a device for capturing the common sense of our species, and recording it in databases (big data). The network is a very singular moment in history because it changes the conditions of that History."

(interview with G. Chatonsky for L'Art Même #66, summer 2015)

About the artists

GRÉGORY CHATONSKY is a French artist based in Montreal and Paris. He has received awards and grants including Dicream (2014), CAC (2013), CALQ (2012), CRSH (2011), Cap Digital (2010), Arcadi (2010), CNAP (2008).

In 2013, he launched TELOFOSSILS, a project at Museum of contemporary art (Taipei). A second version was showed in Beijing (2015). In 2014, his solo exhibition CAPTURE at CDA (Enghein-les-bains), is about a surproductive netrock band.

He has participated in group exhibitions such as Erreur d'impression, Jeu de Paume (Paris), The Beginning of The End (Timisoara), Mois de la Photo (Montréal), Extimitat (Palma), Der Untergang – Doomsday (Berlin), Connect the doct and see the unseen (Roma), Interlife Crisis (Seatte), The Radius (Chicago), Il Pardosso Della Rupetizone (Roma), Augmented Senses (Shanghai), Biennale d'art contemporain (Montréal), etc. A number of residencies such as IMAL (2015), Unicorn (2015), Villa Kujoyama (2014), UQAM (2007), Abbaye de Fontevraud (2006), Le Fresnoy (2004).

He works on the relationship between existence and technology.

http://chatonsky.net/

DOMINIQUE SIROIS lives and work in Montreal, she hold a degree from UQAM in visual art (MFA 2010). Her practice take the form of installation involving an interplay of sculptures, videos, sounds and prints. Sirois work deals with three fields of interest: value and surveillance, economy and affects and ruins and obsolescence. Her projects have been presented in numerous artist run centers in Canada. She also made several residencies abroad among them, Glasgow CCA and the Couvent des Récollets in Paris. She frequently collaborates with artist Grégory Chatonsky. They presented their joint work at Taipei MOCA, at Enghien-les-Bains CDA in France, at Unicorn Center for Arts in Beijing and at Whuan historial museum.

http://dominiquesirois.net/

CHRISTOPHE CHARLES (born Marseille 1964), works with found sounds, and makes compositions using computer programs, insisting on the autonomy of each sound and the absence of hierarchical structure. Graduated from Tsukuba University (Phd., 1996) and Paris INALCO (Phd., 1997). Currently Professor (kyouju) at Musashino Art University (Tokyo). 

C.C. has released music on the German label Mille Plateaux / Ritornell ("undirected" series), and on several compilations (Mille Plateaux, Ritornell, SubrosaCodeCirque, Cross, X-tract, CCIICC, etc). Group exhibitions : ICC "Sound Art" (Tokyo, 2000), V&A "Radical Fashion" (London, 2001), etc. Permanent sound installations at Osaka Sumai Jouhou center (1999), Narita International Airport Central Atrium (2000). 

http://home.att.ne.jp/grape/charles/

Practical Info

Opening
Thursday 10 September 2015
18:30-22:00

Dates
11 September - 18 October 2015
Wed-Sun, 13:00-18:00

Free entrance!

Tour of the exhibition guided by Grégory Chatonsky 
Saturday 12 September 2015 
15:00 - 17:00

Group visits
+32-2-410 30 93
info@imal.org

Location: iMAL
quai des Charbonnages 30 Koolmijnenkaai
1080 Brussels

Media Gallery

Credits

Concept & realisation: Grégory Chatonsky & Dominique Sirois
Sound design: Christophe Charles
Courtesy: XPO Gallery

Extinct Memories is part of a series of events produced by iMAL in 2015 on the topic of cultural heritage in the digital age. These exhibitions, lectures and workshops are organised in collaboration with PACKED, the Centre of Expertise in Digital Heritage.

With the support of the Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec, Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication DICRÉAM et CRSH (research program "CAPTURE")​.
Thanks to Proximus (Logistics Department) for their precious help.

In the framework of Festival des Arts Numériques, with the support of the Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles.