Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

Hi all,

This week's newsletter turned into something of an accidental Halloween edition, and I'm not mad about it. We've got Guillermo del Toro comparing Frankenstein's creator to a careless tech bro while declaring he'd rather die than use generative AI—a characteristically blunt take from a director who's never shied away from monsters, whether they're on screen or in Silicon Valley. Then there's Scott Power's annual Art World Horror Stories podcast episode featuring tales that'll make you shudder: racist comments flooding an artist's social media, Hurricane Helene destroying Asheville's entire River Arts District and displacing 700 artists, and a jealous wife literally slicing up her husband's lover's painting. If that's not enough spooky content, we also have a journalist who recreated Walt Disney's 1929 The Skeleton Dance using motion capture dots during a back pain research study.

Beyond the seasonal scares, we're looking at some genuinely thought-provoking work. There's Elise Swopes' Chasing Waterfalls series—Chicago skyscrapers swallowed by cascading water, created through painstaking manual composites years before AI could do it in seconds. Photo Oxford returns with Michael Christopher Brown using AI not to generate pretty pictures, but to protect the identities of vulnerable Cuban workers he photographed. And 17 Indigenous artists staged an unauthorized AR exhibition at the Met, digitally transforming 19th-century colonial paintings with powwow dancers and pointed inversions that ask who gets to tell American stories. We've also got the world's smallest pixels hitting the theoretical limit of human vision, and yet another absurd AI gadget that solves problems nobody asked to have solved.

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Film & Video

Photography


Artificial Intelligence and Creativity

Definitely Not AI

Q+ART & Podcast Interviews

Dance

Virtual and Augmented Reality in Art

The Last WordThe Last Word

Thanks for spending some time with these stories this week. Whether you're celebrating Halloween or just navigating the everyday horrors and wonders of the art-tech landscape, I'd love to hear what resonated with you—or what you think I'm getting wrong. The conversation is always better when it's two-way.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech