1 00:00:00,784 --> 00:00:03,659 Hi, I'm Refik. I'm a media artist. 2 00:00:03,683 --> 00:00:05,658 I use data as a pigment 3 00:00:05,682 --> 00:00:07,572 and paint with a thinking brush 4 00:00:07,596 --> 00:00:10,455 that is assisted by artificial intelligence. 5 00:00:11,128 --> 00:00:13,876 Using architectural spaces as canvases, 6 00:00:13,900 --> 00:00:15,694 I collaborate with machines 7 00:00:15,718 --> 00:00:18,661 to make buildings dream and hallucinate. 8 00:00:18,685 --> 00:00:21,400 You may be wondering, what does all this mean? 9 00:00:21,424 --> 00:00:25,089 So let me please take you into my work and my world. 10 00:00:25,851 --> 00:00:29,590 I witnessed the power of imagination when I was eight years old, 11 00:00:29,614 --> 00:00:31,956 as a child growing up in Istanbul. 12 00:00:31,980 --> 00:00:35,371 One day, my mom brought home a videocassette 13 00:00:35,395 --> 00:00:38,078 of the science-fiction movie "Blade Runner." 14 00:00:38,102 --> 00:00:41,077 I clearly remember being mesmerized 15 00:00:41,101 --> 00:00:46,010 by the stunning architectural vision of the future of Los Angeles, 16 00:00:46,034 --> 00:00:48,586 a place that I had never seen before. 17 00:00:48,610 --> 00:00:54,007 That vision became a kind of a staple of my daydreams. 18 00:00:54,031 --> 00:00:56,793 When I arrived in LA in 2012 19 00:00:56,817 --> 00:00:59,237 for a graduate program in Design Media Arts, 20 00:00:59,261 --> 00:01:01,651 I rented a car and drove downtown 21 00:01:01,675 --> 00:01:04,721 to see that wonderful world of the near future. 22 00:01:05,482 --> 00:01:07,128 I remember a specific line 23 00:01:07,152 --> 00:01:10,221 that kept playing over and over in my head: 24 00:01:10,245 --> 00:01:12,340 the scene when the android Rachael 25 00:01:12,364 --> 00:01:16,079 realizes that her memories are actually not hers, 26 00:01:16,103 --> 00:01:20,754 and when Deckard tells her they are someone else's memories. 27 00:01:20,778 --> 00:01:22,011 Since that moment, 28 00:01:22,035 --> 00:01:24,915 one of my inspirations has been this question. 29 00:01:25,561 --> 00:01:29,900 What can a machine do with someone else's memories? 30 00:01:29,924 --> 00:01:32,627 Or, to say that in another way, 31 00:01:32,651 --> 00:01:36,402 what does it mean to be an AI in the 21st century? 32 00:01:37,441 --> 00:01:39,538 Any android or AI machine 33 00:01:39,562 --> 00:01:42,679 is only intelligent as long as we collaborate with it. 34 00:01:43,327 --> 00:01:44,792 It can construct things 35 00:01:44,816 --> 00:01:48,072 that human intelligence intends to produce 36 00:01:48,096 --> 00:01:50,238 but does not have the capacity to do so. 37 00:01:51,373 --> 00:01:55,178 Think about your activities and social networks, for example. 38 00:01:55,208 --> 00:01:58,756 They get smarter the more you interact with them. 39 00:01:58,780 --> 00:02:03,249 If machines can learn or process memories, 40 00:02:03,273 --> 00:02:05,134 can they also dream? 41 00:02:05,158 --> 00:02:06,644 Hallucinate? 42 00:02:06,668 --> 00:02:09,082 Involuntarily remember, 43 00:02:09,106 --> 00:02:13,059 or make connections between multiple people's dreams? 44 00:02:13,083 --> 00:02:19,106 Does being an AI in the 21st century simply mean not forgetting anything? 45 00:02:20,365 --> 00:02:21,548 And, if so, 46 00:02:21,572 --> 00:02:25,826 isn't it the most revolutionary thing that we have experienced 47 00:02:25,850 --> 00:02:30,762 in our centuries-long effort to capture history across media? 48 00:02:31,406 --> 00:02:32,740 In other words, 49 00:02:32,764 --> 00:02:36,217 how far have we come since Ridley Scott's "Blade Runner"? 50 00:02:36,678 --> 00:02:40,165 So I established my studio in 2014 51 00:02:40,189 --> 00:02:42,200 and invited architects, 52 00:02:42,224 --> 00:02:44,596 computer and data scientists, neuroscientists, 53 00:02:44,620 --> 00:02:47,467 musicians and even storytellers 54 00:02:47,491 --> 00:02:50,232 to join me in realizing my dreams. 55 00:02:51,001 --> 00:02:53,835 Can data become a pigment? 56 00:02:53,859 --> 00:02:56,446 This was the very first question we asked 57 00:02:56,470 --> 00:03:01,017 when starting our journey to embed media arts into architecture, 58 00:03:01,041 --> 00:03:03,699 to collide virtual and physical worlds. 59 00:03:04,555 --> 00:03:09,294 So we began to imagine what I would call the poetics of data. 60 00:03:10,124 --> 00:03:12,841 One of our first projects, "Virtual Depictions," 61 00:03:12,865 --> 00:03:14,964 was a public data sculpture piece 62 00:03:14,988 --> 00:03:17,688 commissioned by the city of San Francisco. 63 00:03:17,712 --> 00:03:19,918 The work invites the audience 64 00:03:19,942 --> 00:03:23,157 to be part of a spectacular aesthetic experience 65 00:03:23,181 --> 00:03:24,820 in a living urban space 66 00:03:24,844 --> 00:03:30,415 by depicting a fluid network of connections of the city itself. 67 00:03:30,439 --> 00:03:33,162 It also stands as a reminder 68 00:03:33,186 --> 00:03:36,546 of how invisible data from our everyday lives, 69 00:03:36,570 --> 00:03:39,736 like the Twitter feeds that are represented here, 70 00:03:39,760 --> 00:03:41,888 can be made visible 71 00:03:41,912 --> 00:03:47,609 and transformed into sensory knowledge that can be experienced collectively. 72 00:03:48,619 --> 00:03:53,519 In fact, data can only become knowledge when it's experienced, 73 00:03:53,543 --> 00:03:57,519 and what is knowledge and experience can take many forms. 74 00:03:57,543 --> 00:03:59,303 When exploring such connections 75 00:03:59,327 --> 00:04:03,833 through the vast potential of machine intelligence, 76 00:04:03,857 --> 00:04:09,072 we also pondered the connection between human senses 77 00:04:09,096 --> 00:04:12,747 and the machines' capacity for simulating nature. 78 00:04:12,771 --> 00:04:17,771 These inquiries began while working on wind-data paintings. 79 00:04:17,795 --> 00:04:20,755 They took the shape of visualized poems 80 00:04:20,779 --> 00:04:25,593 based on hidden data sets that we collected from wind sensors. 81 00:04:25,617 --> 00:04:28,430 We then used generative algorithms 82 00:04:28,454 --> 00:04:32,645 to transform wind speed, gust and direction 83 00:04:32,669 --> 00:04:35,303 into an ethereal data pigment. 84 00:04:36,387 --> 00:04:40,418 The result was a meditative yet speculative experience. 85 00:04:41,349 --> 00:04:44,212 This kinetic data sculpture, titled "Bosphorus," 86 00:04:44,236 --> 00:04:48,553 was a similar attempt to question our capacity to reimagine 87 00:04:48,577 --> 00:04:49,982 natural occurrences. 88 00:04:51,299 --> 00:04:55,736 Using high-frequency radar collections of the Marmara Sea, 89 00:04:55,760 --> 00:04:57,990 we collected sea-surface data 90 00:04:58,014 --> 00:05:01,195 and projected its dynamic movement with machine intelligence. 91 00:05:01,874 --> 00:05:03,972 We create a sense of immersion 92 00:05:03,996 --> 00:05:08,175 in a calm yet constantly changing synthetic sea view. 93 00:05:09,524 --> 00:05:13,612 Seeing with the brain is often called imagination, 94 00:05:13,636 --> 00:05:15,940 and, for me, imagining architecture 95 00:05:15,964 --> 00:05:19,845 goes beyond just glass, metal or concrete, 96 00:05:19,869 --> 00:05:24,370 instead experimenting with the furthermost possibilities of immersion 97 00:05:24,394 --> 00:05:28,507 and ways of augmenting our perception in built environments. 98 00:05:28,531 --> 00:05:32,184 Research in artificial intelligence is growing every day, 99 00:05:32,208 --> 00:05:36,086 leaving us with the feeling of being plugged into a system 100 00:05:36,110 --> 00:05:38,404 that is bigger and more knowledgeable 101 00:05:38,428 --> 00:05:39,880 than ourselves. 102 00:05:39,904 --> 00:05:43,508 In 2017, we discovered an open-source library 103 00:05:43,532 --> 00:05:46,174 of cultural documents in Istanbul 104 00:05:46,198 --> 00:05:49,658 and began working on "Archive Dreaming," 105 00:05:49,682 --> 00:05:53,976 one of the first AI-driven public installations in the world, 106 00:05:54,000 --> 00:06:00,975 an AI exploring approximately 1.7 million documents that span 270 years. 107 00:06:01,788 --> 00:06:04,630 One of our inspirations during this process 108 00:06:04,654 --> 00:06:08,081 was a short story called "The Library of Babel" 109 00:06:08,105 --> 00:06:11,312 by the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. 110 00:06:11,336 --> 00:06:17,065 In the story, the author conceives a universe in the form of a vast library 111 00:06:17,089 --> 00:06:23,000 containing all possible 410-page books of a certain format and character set. 112 00:06:23,024 --> 00:06:24,493 Through this inspiring image, 113 00:06:24,517 --> 00:06:29,247 we imagine a way to physically explore the vast archives of knowledge 114 00:06:29,271 --> 00:06:31,762 in the age of machine intelligence. 115 00:06:31,786 --> 00:06:33,844 The resulting work, as you can see, 116 00:06:33,868 --> 00:06:36,491 was a user-driven immersive space. 117 00:06:36,515 --> 00:06:41,390 "Archive Dreaming" profoundly transformed the experience of a library 118 00:06:41,414 --> 00:06:44,163 in the age of machine intelligence. 119 00:06:44,187 --> 00:06:48,255 "Machine Hallucination" is an exploration of time and space 120 00:06:48,279 --> 00:06:52,732 experienced through New York City's public photographic archives. 121 00:06:52,756 --> 00:06:55,382 For this one-of-a-kind immersive project, 122 00:06:55,406 --> 00:06:58,070 we deployed machine-learning algorithms 123 00:06:58,094 --> 00:07:02,256 to find and process over 100 million photographs of the city. 124 00:07:03,008 --> 00:07:06,090 We designed an innovative narrative system 125 00:07:06,114 --> 00:07:12,317 to use artificial intelligence to predict or to hallucinate new images, 126 00:07:12,341 --> 00:07:16,264 allowing the viewer to step into a dreamlike fusion 127 00:07:16,288 --> 00:07:18,412 of past and future New York. 128 00:07:19,832 --> 00:07:21,651 As our projects delve deeper 129 00:07:21,675 --> 00:07:25,351 into remembering and transmitting knowledge, 130 00:07:25,375 --> 00:07:30,333 we thought more about how memories were not static recollections 131 00:07:30,357 --> 00:07:33,718 but ever-changing interpretations of past events. 132 00:07:34,269 --> 00:07:36,350 We pondered how machines 133 00:07:36,374 --> 00:07:40,404 could simulate unconscious and subconscious events, 134 00:07:40,428 --> 00:07:44,340 such as dreaming, remembering and hallucinating. 135 00:07:45,356 --> 00:07:48,260 Thus, we created "Melting Memories" 136 00:07:48,284 --> 00:07:50,705 to visualize the moment of remembering. 137 00:07:51,824 --> 00:07:54,491 The inspiration came from a tragic event, 138 00:07:54,515 --> 00:07:58,026 when I found out that my uncle was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. 139 00:07:59,602 --> 00:08:02,023 At that time, all I could think about 140 00:08:02,047 --> 00:08:07,110 was to find a way to celebrate how and what we remember 141 00:08:07,134 --> 00:08:09,128 when we are still able to do so. 142 00:08:09,152 --> 00:08:13,232 I began to think of memories not as disappearing 143 00:08:13,256 --> 00:08:16,168 but as melting or changing shape. 144 00:08:16,192 --> 00:08:18,253 With the help of machine intelligence, 145 00:08:18,277 --> 00:08:21,740 we worked with the scientists at the Neuroscape Laboratory 146 00:08:21,764 --> 00:08:23,603 at the University of California, 147 00:08:23,627 --> 00:08:29,184 who showed us how to understand brain signals as memories are made. 148 00:08:29,208 --> 00:08:34,311 Although my own uncle was losing the ability to process memories, 149 00:08:34,335 --> 00:08:37,858 the artwork generated by EEG data 150 00:08:37,882 --> 00:08:41,184 explored the materiality of remembering 151 00:08:41,208 --> 00:08:45,588 and stood as a tribute to what my uncle had lost. 152 00:08:48,533 --> 00:08:51,487 Almost nothing about contemporary LA 153 00:08:51,511 --> 00:08:55,272 matched my childhood expectation of the city, 154 00:08:55,296 --> 00:08:58,386 with the exception of one amazing building: 155 00:08:58,410 --> 00:09:01,799 the Walt Disney Concert Hall, designed by Frank Gehry, 156 00:09:01,823 --> 00:09:03,554 one of my all-time heroes. 157 00:09:04,208 --> 00:09:07,565 In 2018, I had a call from the LA Philharmonic 158 00:09:07,589 --> 00:09:09,500 who was looking for an installation 159 00:09:09,524 --> 00:09:13,614 to help mark the celebrated symphony's hundred-year anniversary. 160 00:09:13,638 --> 00:09:17,010 For this, we decided to ask the question, 161 00:09:17,034 --> 00:09:19,974 "Can a building learn? Can it dream?" 162 00:09:20,614 --> 00:09:21,791 To answer this question, 163 00:09:21,815 --> 00:09:27,646 we decided to collect everything recorded in the archives of the LA Phil and WDCH. 164 00:09:27,670 --> 00:09:32,535 To be precise, 77 terabytes of digitally archived memories. 165 00:09:32,559 --> 00:09:34,726 By using machine intelligence, 166 00:09:34,750 --> 00:09:38,166 the entire archive, going back 100 years, 167 00:09:38,190 --> 00:09:41,195 became projections on the building's skin, 168 00:09:41,219 --> 00:09:45,163 42 projectors to achieve this futuristic public experience 169 00:09:45,187 --> 00:09:47,362 in the heart of Los Angeles, 170 00:09:47,386 --> 00:09:51,369 getting one step closer to the LA of "Blade Runner." 171 00:09:52,146 --> 00:09:54,660 If ever a building could dream, 172 00:09:54,684 --> 00:09:56,361 it was in this moment. 173 00:09:59,703 --> 00:10:04,449 Now, I am inviting you to one last journey into the mind of a machine. 174 00:10:05,877 --> 00:10:09,241 Right now, we are fully immersed in the data universe 175 00:10:09,265 --> 00:10:13,813 of every single curated TED Talk from the past 30 years. 176 00:10:13,837 --> 00:10:20,439 That means this data set includes 7,705 talks from the TED stage. 177 00:10:21,094 --> 00:10:25,635 Those talks have been translated into 7.4 million seconds, 178 00:10:25,659 --> 00:10:29,754 and each second is represented here in this data universe. 179 00:10:29,778 --> 00:10:31,849 Every image that you are seeing in here 180 00:10:31,873 --> 00:10:34,945 represents unique moments from those talks. 181 00:10:34,969 --> 00:10:36,842 By using machine intelligence, 182 00:10:36,866 --> 00:10:41,167 we processed a total of 487,000 sentences 183 00:10:41,191 --> 00:10:45,580 into 330 unique clusters of topics like nature, global emissions, 184 00:10:45,604 --> 00:10:48,890 extinction, race issues, computation, 185 00:10:48,914 --> 00:10:52,454 trust, emotions, water and refugees. 186 00:10:52,478 --> 00:10:55,327 These clusters are then connected to each other 187 00:10:55,351 --> 00:10:56,613 by an algorithm, 188 00:10:56,637 --> 00:11:00,479 [that] generated 113 million line segments, 189 00:11:00,503 --> 00:11:03,606 which reveal new conceptual relationships. 190 00:11:03,630 --> 00:11:06,971 Wouldn't it be amazing to be able to remember 191 00:11:06,995 --> 00:11:10,064 all the questions that have ever been asked on the stage? 192 00:11:11,507 --> 00:11:12,946 Here I am, 193 00:11:12,970 --> 00:11:15,832 inside the mind of countless great thinkers, 194 00:11:15,856 --> 00:11:19,579 as well as a machine, interacting with various feelings 195 00:11:19,603 --> 00:11:21,968 attributed to learning, 196 00:11:21,992 --> 00:11:24,228 remembering, questioning 197 00:11:24,252 --> 00:11:27,619 and imagining all at the same time, 198 00:11:27,643 --> 00:11:29,918 expanding the power of the mind. 199 00:11:31,034 --> 00:11:33,431 For me, being right here 200 00:11:33,455 --> 00:11:37,407 is indeed what it means to be an AI in the 21st century. 201 00:11:38,184 --> 00:11:40,477 It is in our hands, humans, 202 00:11:40,501 --> 00:11:44,017 to train this mind to learn and remember 203 00:11:44,041 --> 00:11:46,134 what we can only dream of. 204 00:11:47,258 --> 00:11:48,408 Thank you.