Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

Hi all,

This week's stories all circle around the same question: who controls the frame? From John Whitney repurposing WWII anti-aircraft hardware to create the spirographs in Vertigo's opening credits—military targeting systems turned into tools for beauty—to Gretchen Andrew's Universal Beauty series revealing how even Miss Universe contestants can't meet algorithmic beauty standards, we're looking at how technology determines what gets seen and who gets to be visible. Ganbrood's Second Gaze confronts Steve McCurry's iconic Afghan Girl photograph, asking who owns an image once it becomes a symbol. These aren't abstract questions—they're about power, representation, and whose version of reality becomes the official record.

The thread runs through every story here: activists staging ICE raids inside GTA and Fortnite to teach immigrant rights (reclaiming game worlds from government recruitment propaganda), Jess Bush curating space art for ABC while I'm thinking about our own First Friday exhibitions at NotRealArt.com, even Ringling's new Creative Technologies program teaching students to "make it, ship it" right here in Sarasota. Brian Niemeier's uncomfortable argument that culture flows downstream from power—not the other way around—hits differently when you see how consistently these stories reveal artists and educators actively trying to redirect that flow. Whether it's a game world, a view of the cosmos, a curriculum, or an algorithm deciding which faces are worth seeing, the question remains: who actually controls the frame through which we see ourselves and each other?

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Film & Video

Societal Impact of Art and Tech

AI in Visual Arts

Artificial Intelligence and Creativity

Gaming

Art & Science

Art and Politics

Tech in Art Education

The Last WordThe Last Word

I'm genuinely curious what you think about this pattern—are we witnessing a shift in who gets to define visibility, or are these just individual acts of resistance against systems too big to change? Either way, these stories feel urgent to me right now. Thanks for reading, and if any of this resonates or troubles you, I'd love to hear your thoughts.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech