Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

Hi all,

This week's stories touch on a common thread that I can't stop thinking about: the persistent gap between what technology promises and what it actually delivers. The InkPoster e-ink display finally nails what a digital art frame should be—no backlight, battery-powered, genuinely paper-like—but it's still priced somewhere between $1K-$2K while HD TVs cost a few hundred dollars. Over at Zineopolis, there's a thoughtful exploration of how zines and illustration technology haven't quite democratized publishing the way early advocates hoped. And that recurring pattern of AI-generated music fooling 90% of listeners makes me wonder if we're just not trained yet to hear the difference, or if our ears simply lack the instinct our eyes have for spotting visual fakery.

What stood out for me is Noah Smith's review of David Marx's "Blank Space," which argues that cultural innovation comes from novel technology—but eventually those possibilities get "mined out." The electric guitar changed music for decades, but there's only so much new ground you can break before saturation replaces genuine innovation. It's a compelling explanation for why American pop culture feels stuck recycling superhero franchises and sequels. Meanwhile, Sabrina Dowling Giudici's glass sculptures ("Murano meets Burano," as Venetians describe them) remind us that sometimes the path to creative work requires a decades-long detour through accounting and regional development—something I relate to after my own five-year stint as a New York photographer before entering the field of programming and UX design.

The good news? Luke Jerram's bringing his Mirror Moon sculpture to the Royal Observatory Greenwich in March 2026, and it's exactly the kind of tactile, data-driven art that makes the cosmos feel immediate rather than distant. Sometimes the best intersection of art and technology isn't about new tools at all—it's about being able to physically touch every crater on the lunar surface of a sculpture.

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Technology in Music

Film & Video

Societal Impact of Art and Tech

Design


Sculpture

Art & Science


The Last WordThe Last Word

Thanks for sticking with me through this exploration of some gaps between art and tech innovations, and their deliverables. I'm curious what you think—are we mining out our current technologies, or have we simply lost our appetite for creative risk? Hit reply and let me know what resonates with you this week.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech