Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

I've been wanting to do a drone issue for a while. Kept putting it off, and it took me some time to figure out why.

Part of it is that drones stopped feeling innocent to me somewhere around 2022. The same swarms that choreograph light shows over stadiums are now coordinating strikes over Kyiv. That's not a metaphor — it's the same technology, sometimes literally the same hardware. Once you know that, you can't fully unknow it, and the aerial photograph of a fog-filled Norwegian valley carries a little more weight than it used to.

But I also didn't want to write a eulogy. The wonder was real. Filip Hrebenda's "The Gate" still stops me cold. So does DRIFT's swarm at LACMA. The delight happened, and it mattered.

What I eventually realized is that the drone story isn't really about drones. It's about a pattern — one that Cory Doctorow has a word for, and one that the stories in this issue will trace better than I can in an intro. The articles will do the talking. I just wanted to say: I felt it too, the before. That's why the after stings.

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Societal Impact of Art and Tech






The Last WordThe Last Word

Thanks for reading this week — and for sitting with something that doesn't resolve neatly. I keep coming back to that question of when exactly the sky started feeling different, and I genuinely don't know if it's the technology that changed or just me. If you have a moment, hit reply and tell me: is there a specific image, or a specific news story, where the shift happened for you? I'm curious whether this lands differently depending on where you live under that sky.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech