Generative Ecologies | Design Imaginaries With AI Past Event
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All gender bathroom, Seating available, Wheelchair accessibleGenerative Ecologies | Design Imaginaries with AI is an exhibition and workshop using AI-augmented design to explore the boundaries between artificial, human, and more-than-human intelligences. Generative AI tools provide powerful yet accessible ways to imagine, visualise and share the urgent design interventions we need in order to foster care and enact change on our damaged planet. This event offers audiences two ways of engaging with both these tools and with the bold thinking of young designers addressing ecological uncertainties.
The exhibition features speculative works created by RMIT design students that imagine vital, planetary interventions and propose radical species re-orientations for more-than-human flourishing. The exhibition showcases speculative design works that explore generative AI tools in the context of living systems to envisage adaptations and transformations of the Earth that may ensure more-than-human flourishing. These works will be installed at the RMIT media portal on Swanston Street and displayed via projection and print.
A free Gen AI design workshop will guide participants to engage with AI as a design tool and catalyst for co-creation, exploring how partnerships with technology emphasise the interconnectedness of all life forms. Facilitated by students and staff from RMIT, the workshop encourages a holistic perspective on design, exploring collaboration with nature, animals, and technological entities. Participants will actively engage in hands-on exercises and discussions, with the workshop held in the exhibition space. Through these immersive experiences, they will gain practical insights into leveraging AI as a tool for generating ecological design imaginaries.
Participants
Emma is a designer and academic working at the intersection of industrial design, wearables, immersive experiences and HCI. Her work explores holistic approaches to data, materiality, aesthetics and personalisation for human and ecological health and wellbeing.
Kate is an artist working with digital and sensory space through media and fabrication techniques that include neon, textiles and code. Her work explores ways to materialise the psychosocial effects of network culture and ways to design technological experiences that centre wellbeing.
Linus is an architectural and futures design researcher. He researches how architects and designers think, act, and learn, and how using Generative AI changes the way designers think, act, and learn.
Thom Luke is an industrial designer, entrepreneur, academic. A current PhD candidate his practice blends a decade of industry expertise with radical innovation and emerging methods of working with disruptive generative AI.
Dates
Tickets
Venue
Access
All gender bathroom, Seating available, Wheelchair accessibleGenerative Ecologies | Design Imaginaries with AI is an exhibition and workshop using AI-augmented design to explore the boundaries between artificial, human, and more-than-human intelligences. Generative AI tools provide powerful yet accessible ways to imagine, visualise and share the urgent design interventions we need in order to foster care and enact change on our damaged planet. This event offers audiences two ways of engaging with both these tools and with the bold thinking of young designers addressing ecological uncertainties.
The exhibition features speculative works created by RMIT design students that imagine vital, planetary interventions and propose radical species re-orientations for more-than-human flourishing. The exhibition showcases speculative design works that explore generative AI tools in the context of living systems to envisage adaptations and transformations of the Earth that may ensure more-than-human flourishing. These works will be installed at the RMIT media portal on Swanston Street and displayed via projection and print.
A free Gen AI design workshop will guide participants to engage with AI as a design tool and catalyst for co-creation, exploring how partnerships with technology emphasise the interconnectedness of all life forms. Facilitated by students and staff from RMIT, the workshop encourages a holistic perspective on design, exploring collaboration with nature, animals, and technological entities. Participants will actively engage in hands-on exercises and discussions, with the workshop held in the exhibition space. Through these immersive experiences, they will gain practical insights into leveraging AI as a tool for generating ecological design imaginaries.
Participants
Emma is a designer and academic working at the intersection of industrial design, wearables, immersive experiences and HCI. Her work explores holistic approaches to data, materiality, aesthetics and personalisation for human and ecological health and wellbeing.
Kate is an artist working with digital and sensory space through media and fabrication techniques that include neon, textiles and code. Her work explores ways to materialise the psychosocial effects of network culture and ways to design technological experiences that centre wellbeing.
Linus is an architectural and futures design researcher. He researches how architects and designers think, act, and learn, and how using Generative AI changes the way designers think, act, and learn.
Thom Luke is an industrial designer, entrepreneur, academic. A current PhD candidate his practice blends a decade of industry expertise with radical innovation and emerging methods of working with disruptive generative AI.