ARCOmadrid 2026

Galeria SENDA is pleased to participate in ARCOmadrid 2026 with a presentation bringing together works by Aitor OrtizAnna Malagrida, Anselm Reyle, Anthony Goicolea, Aryz, Elena del Rivero, Evru Zush, Glenda León, Gonzalo Guzmán, Irán do Espírito Santo, Jaume Plensa, Jordi Benardó, Peter Halley, Sandra Vásquez de la Horra , Xavi Bou and Yago Hortal

The presentation creates a dialogue between different generations and contexts, connecting practices that explore materiality, space, architecture and the symbolic tensions shaping the contemporary landscape.

Alongside the booth, a dedicated artist project will highlight Miralda on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of Honeymoon Project (1986–1992), a defining work in his career. Bringing together works created during that period, the presentation foregrounds the project’s breadth and affirms its enduring impact on the artist’s practice.

Find us at booth 9B25 from March 4 to 8!


About the selection

The presentation brings together artists who, through diverse practices, share a close attention to space, materiality, and the way we inhabit the world.

In the works of ’Aitor Ortiz, Jordi Benardó and Irán do Espírito Santo,, architecture and structure become a starting point. Their pieces explore lines, volumes, and perspectives that reshape our perception of the built environment. Along similar lines, Anna Malagrida and Xavi Bou approach landscape and space as transitional zones, capturing what often goes unnoticed: reflections, movement, and subtle shifts.

Color and surface take center stage in the works of Anselm Reyle, Peter Halley, and Gonzalo Guzmán, where painting expands beyond the traditional canvas and moves toward the object. Their pieces stand out for their strong visual impact and their deliberate construction of form.

Meanwhile, artists such as Anthony Goicolea, Sandra Vásquez de la Horra, and Jaume Plensa focus on the human figure. Their works explore identity, memory, and interiority, creating images that resonate on both personal and collective levels. Their works address themes such as identity, memory, and interiority, creating images that resonate with both personal and collective experiences. Within this same symbolic territory, Glenda León works through synthesis and subtlety, articulating pieces in which image, sound, and concept enter into dialogue to reflect on perception, silence, and the ideological tensions of the present.

The imaginative universe of Evru Zush introduces a symbolic and fantastical dimension, where drawing, writing, and image merge into a unique visual language. Finally, Aryz, Yago Hortal and Elena del Rivero incorporate gesture, texture, and the passage of time as essential elements, making process and trace visible in each work.

Together, the selection offers a diverse yet cohesive journey, where painting, photography, and sculpture engage in dialogue to propose different ways of seeing and understanding contemporary space.

Discover more in our ARCO DOSSIER

 

MIRALDA. Book presentation “Monuments in Love: Love Letters”

In 2026, Honeymoon Project marks its 40th anniversary—one of the most emblematic works of contemporary art and international public art—conceived by Antoni Miralda as a symbolic wedding between the Statue of Liberty in New York and the Columbus Monument in Barcelona. Developed between 1986 and 1992, the project activated public rituals, participatory actions, collective celebrations, and transnational collaborations to reflect—through love, humor, and food—on history, power, conquest, and cultural exchanges between the Old and the New World. Through proposals such as Love Letters, Miralda humanized both monuments, offering a critical and poetic perspective that remains deeply relevant today.

As part of this anniversary, Sala Apolo will host on February 13, 2026, at 6:30 pm, a performative celebration marking the public presentation of the book Monuments in Love / Love Letters. This free event, with prior reservation, will bring together contemporary art, performance, and music around Miralda’s work. Far from a conventional format, the presentation is conceived as a living, collective act, with the participation of Victoria Cirlot, Elvira Dyangani Ose, and Gabriel Ventura, and will include a loving dialogue with a performative reading of the Love Letters exchanged between Liberty and Columbus—one of the most extensive projects of collaboration and public participation within Honeymoon Project.

The evening will be rounded out with a HoneyMousse and a toast created in collaboration with Tiberi Club, a musical performance by Akajú—Francesca Frigeri and Luiz Murakami in quintet formation together with Carola Ortiz, Anatol Eremciuc Bahici, and Miguel Guerra Guerrero—and the video projection Colón era una mujer by Hidrogenesse, the project by Carlos Ballesteros and Genís Segarra. The event also coincides with the removal of Liberty Crown Brocheta, a work originally created in 1985 for El Internacional Tapas Bar & Restaurant in New York and reinterpreted by Miralda to preside over the lobby of Sala Apolo as part of the Art Meets Apolo program. In this piece, the rays of the Statue of Liberty’s crown are transformed into luminous skewers of fruits and vegetables—tomatoes, peppers, corn, potatoes, and pineapples—foods linked to the Columbian Exchange, activating a critical reflection on the relationship between food, power, history, and monument.

The presentation is part of Art Meets Apolo (A.M.A.), an exhibition project developed together with LAB36 and Galeria Senda that explores the intersection of contemporary art and club culture, activating Sala Apolo as a hybrid space for collective experience, celebration, and critical thinking. This anniversary marks the beginning of a year-long celebration around Honeymoon Project, a work that anticipated relational, participatory, and transnational practices that are now central to contemporary art.

Event: A.M.A presents – 40 Years of Honeymoon Project by Miralda
Date: February 13, 2026
Time: 6:30 pm
Venue: Sala Apolo, Barcelona
Admission: Free with prior reservation
👉 Registration: https://link.dice.fm/P4185a739a21

ZⓈONAMACO México 2026

ZⓈONAMACO México Arte Contemporáneo consolidates its position as the most influential art fair in Latin America, a meeting point where some of the most relevant proposals from the international art scene come into dialogue. From February 4 to 8, 2026, Mexico City will once again become the epicenter of contemporary art in a 22nd edition articulated across various sections. Galeria SENDA takes part in the Main Section, presenting a curatorial proposal that invites visitors to move through, pause, and resonate.

For this edition, SENDA presents a booth conceived as a space of transition and experience: a journey where sculpture, painting, drawing, photography, and installation coexist, and where the body, identity, memory, the spiritual, and the political intertwine through a critical and poetic lens. A place to inhabit the fair with time, sensitivity, and attention.

If you are in Mexico City, we look forward to welcoming you to discover a proposal that articulates different ways of inhabiting contemporaneity through the symbolic, the affective, and the political.

📍 Booth B112 · 📆 ZⓈONAMACO 2026

Artists and works

ARYZ
His painting proposes suspended scenes, fragmented bodies, and echoes of art history that dialogue with the urban imaginary. Dense, eroded surfaces construct vestigial images, poised between the monumental and the unfinished, activating questions around memory and representation.

Iran do Espírito Santo
Through an extreme formal reduction, he transforms industrial materials into silent presences. Steel, stone, and granite become exercises in perception and balance, where the everyday is stripped of function to reveal a restrained poetics.

Anthony Goicolea
Paintings and drawings in which the intimate, the political, and the symbolic converge. Androgynous figures and suspended landscapes explore identity, belonging, and desire through the notion of queer time, connecting autobiography, myth, and religious iconography.

Gonzalo Guzmán

Stainless steel sculptures that emerge between dream and wakefulness. Forms that evoke menhirs and archaic artifacts reflect and distort their surroundings, inviting sculpture to be understood as ritual and projection of the subconscious.

Glenda León
Minimal gestures and subtle associations transform the everyday into a poetic device. Her work explores the visible and the invisible, the sonic and the material, activating an attentive contemplation in which the extraordinary irrupts into the ordinary.

Robert Mapplethorpe
Black-and-white photography of radical precision. Body, desire, and identity are articulated through an aesthetic in which the classical and the transgressive coexist in tension. The selection pays tribute to the formal and conceptual power of his legacy.

Jaume Plensa
Silent figures that engage in dialogue with language and space. His sculptures act as containers of memory and spirituality, proposing an introspective pause within the pulse of the fair.

Teresa Serrano
A practice with a strong political and autobiographical dimension. Sculpture, installation, and video address gender violence, power, and language, linking the personal with Mexican and international social contexts through resistance and active memory.

Trazos y Pedazos

It all begins with Karin Kneffel: an unmade duvet, an old television where cowboys without a destiny ride across the screen, and, on the floor, a broken vase. The scene has something like a prologue, as if we’ve arriving late to the story. The important events have already taken place, but their echoes remain: in the folds, the strokes and the fragments.

The sounds of Glenda León, transformed into blue sculptures, are whispers from another time: a horse’s neigh, birds that fly, the breeze. As if the film on the television had escaped into space and become matter. These forms pulse gently, reminding us that the invisible also leaves a trace.

The leporellos and the wax-covered figures where the artist Sandra Vásquez de la Horra’s it suggest us an intimate narrative, almost secret. Aymarás, The bañista, and El tango feroz appear as vignettes of a story within a story: characters proceeding between paper houses, ritual shadows, physical gestures and memory.

Elena del Rivero’s feathers, suspended like flying letters, can be read as fragile messages in transit. Flying Letter #24 seems written for someone who will never even read it, but its movement keeps the attempt at communication alive. Adjacent, a stainless-steel menhir emerges like a lucid dream: a vertical presence, a mirror, a threshold. Gonzalo Guzmán’s work suggests an impossible gleaming stone, that remind us that every story needs a place to pause to reflect.

Close by, Jaume Plensa’s iron distills the weight of the human into abstraction. His CAP III evokes both head and silence, mass and thought. A piece that doesn’t explain literally, but holds something within: as if is keeping the secret of a narrative we’ve yet have to learn how to read. On the floor, Susana Solano’s structure conjures spaces we’ve passed through, while Evru/Zush’s bell holds within it the resonance of every sound that has been and those that are still waiting to be heard.

Thus, among brushstrokes and fragments, the mezzanine becomes a stage. The painting is a prologue; the sculptures, chapters; the sounds, background whispers. We move through the space as one moves through an open-ended story: a tale of action and consequence, of gestures and traces, visible and invisible.

Everything is in motion, in tension. Like a dream breaking apart upon waking.

galeria SENDA at Loop Lab Busan

Galeria Senda participates in the first edition of the international multimedia art fair Loop Lab Busan, a new initiative of Loop Barcelona. SENDA presents Tous les Oiseaux du Monde by Xavi Bou (Barcelona, 1979)

Xavi Bou, Tous Les Oiseaux Du Monde, 2022, 5′ 13″

This video was created following an invitation for an artistic residency held from 2020 to 2022 at the University of Leuven in Belgium. In it, working with teams from different faculties, the artist raises the hypothetical possibility of monitoring and calculating the total number of birds on the planet, through the generation of Artificial Intelligence models that allow individuals of all species to be identified.

The trend in our society, organized through Big Data, is to control all information and track any useful parameter, including those from nature. Bou questions whether we will be able to register all the living beings on the planet through the analysis of both structured and unstructured information as a possible nod in the fight against the climate crisis and the restoration of ecosystems and habitats.

Thomas More wrote the book “Utopia” in 1516. It was first published in Dirk Martens’ printing house in Leuven. The book coins the concept of utopia and describes an ideal and peaceful society where people live free and in harmony with nature. For Thomas More, the establishment of a new method of government had to be based on a tool that guaranteed excellence in business administration: mathematics.

More than 500 years later, the algorithms generated by Artificial Intelligence and its capacity for exponential advancement restore the notions of utopia and dystopia articulated in the work of Xavi Bou. The ability to predict, understand, and work autonomously, simulating human intelligence, opens new uncertain horizons that scare and excite us at the same time.

Likewise, Bou’s work reflects and questions the capacity for control and the impact on the freedom and security of individuals fostered by the newly available tools.

Fears about the risks of Artificial Intelligence seem to be prevailing over the hopes generated by new opportunities. Bou’s vision does not offer certain answers to open questions but points out the idea that the proper use of this technology depends on the ethics of those who develop it and the ability of users to control their privacy and protect their data.

This work was carried out sometime before the launch of ChatGPT and other platforms that only confirm all the doubts, fears, and, why not, hopes that the author invites us to question through a work it transcends the theme and genre it addresses.

Galeria SENDA in Paris

To head start the month of April, galería SENDA travels to Paris with a selection of artists that weaves together materiality, perception, and identity through an intergenerational lens. The works on view share a common sensibility: a deep engagement with the tactile and the conceptual, the intimate and the expansive.

 

Among the artists presented are Peter Halley, with his geometric compositions and exploration of modern space—alongside his solo exhibition at Casal Solleric (Palma de Mallorca); and Yago Hortal, known for his energetic, chromatically immersive gesture painting. Also on view will be a sculpture by Stephan Balkenhol; Brazilian artist Iran do Espírito Santo’s work—ranging from sculpture to his Pangolin watercolor series; Glenda León’s organic marble forms; and Anthony Goicolea’s layered compositions that blend photography, drawing, and painting in a meditation on memory and identity.

We are pleased to count on the special presence of Jordi Bernadó and Gonzalo Guzmán. Bernadó will present ID Project, a critical reflection on space and its role in shaping identity. Gonzalo Guzmán, meanwhile, will exhibit stainless steel sculptures inspired by lucid dreams—works that blur the boundary between inner and outer worlds, translating dream imagery into enduring sculptural form.

 

This first participation in Art Paris 2025 marks a new chapter in our journey: another step in the internationalization of our artists and in building bridges between scenes, cities, and ways of seeing.

 

We look forward to seeing you at Art Paris 2025, from 3 to 6 April at the Grand Palais, booth D12.

ARCO Madrid 2025

For this new edition of ARCOmadrid, galeria SENDA once again builds a narrative between the different artists that fill the walls of our stand with stories. With a very varied proposal, our mission this year is to dialogue between the different figures, both emerging and consolidated, who show in Madrid their most personal creations.

 

This year, ARYZ joins our booth for the first time, and we have the pleasure of exhibiting his work Los autónomos on our exterior wall. Following this piece, the artist began to create his latest series, Vestigio, where he creates a bidirectional conversation with paintings, sculptures and baroque photographs that catch his attention. Joining the canvas and paper, Cuban-born American ANTHONY GOICOLEA, known for his own visual language, explores the socio-cultural, economic and political context of his life experience as a Cuban, gay and Catholic in the deep south of the country. Color and fluorine, as always, come from the hand of New Yorker PETER HALLEY, whose largest work to date has been exhibited in our gallery at ARCO. That work, approximately five meters wide, plays in consonance with four smaller format pieces, which remain a clear reference to his iconic cells and prisons that evoke the experience of urban life. Accompanying Halley’s color, YAGO HORTAL‘s creations revisit the capital. The textural sensations that the artist generates with his lively brushstrokes have led him to explore new ways of approaching his work, and that is why for this edition of ARCO we will present his most recent project. The drawings of Chilean SANDRA VÁSQUEZ DE LA HORRA will be in charge of evoking a fictitious and obscure world influenced by common themes such as religion, sex, pop culture or death, providing the viewer with a carnal and psychological vision of these issues. Finally, and also on paper, ROBERT WILSON‘s preparatory sketches for his stage production of the opera Der Messias at the Gran Teatre del Liceu will be exhibited in Madrid. These drawings, which capture currents of energy, move away from realism to represent the essence of the theatrical work conceived by the artist.

 

The discipline of sculpture will be represented by several artists, very different from each other, so they will show a rich range of techniques and materials. The polychrome wood pieces of the German STEPHAN BALKENHOL join our stand, to reflect a contrast between the roughness of the chiseled wood and the neatness of the final form. The oneiric dreams of GONZALO GUZMÁN sculpted in stainless steel will forge a metallic set of menhirs and stelae that will show the purest idiosyncrasy of the artist. Finally, our stand will be crowned by the sculptural work of the famous JAUME PLENSA, of whom we currently have an exhibition in our space at 32 Trafalgar Street in Barcelona. With Murmuri, a Catalan word that means “whisper” and that gives its name to the exhibition, Plensa plays with the use of different materials such as alabaster, Murano glass and bronze to give form to that which is intangible.

 

Photography also has a special place in our stand. First, XAVI BOU presents his project Fluctus in a curated space at the fair, which shows the fleeting moment of birds taking off from a zenithal point of view. Bou, who focuses his artistic work on capturing the invisible patterns of the flight of these animals, aims with his works to generate empathy and social awareness, reminding us that each living being is unique and essential in each of our ecosystems. On the other hand, and following the common thread of the fight against misinformation about climate change, six of the works of JORDI BERNADÓ‘s project Last & Lost will be in Madrid. This project is a photographic examination of loss and finitude in the context of the climate crisis, which reflects on the need for a shared commitment to nature and sustainability, and proposes new hopeful ways of seeing the world. To conclude with this artistic discipline, the series Escaparates by ANNA MALAGRIDA will have its place at the fair, coinciding also with the exhibition that the Fundació Tàpies is preparing for the artist.

 

To conclude our proposal for this forty-fourth edition of ARCOmadrid, we will be exhibiting one of the most current installations by Cuban artist GLENDA LEÓN. With Murmurs of the Earth, Leon aims to materialize the energy in its different magnitudes, thanks to the technique of glazed clay and her spirit of wanting to visually show the shared balance of the objects that surround us in our daily lives.

 

With the support of:

ZⓈONAMACO Mexico 2025

ZⓈONAMACO México Arte Contemporáneo is the largest art fair in Latin America. This year, Mexico City will host galleries and visitors from the 5th to the 9th of February, with a twenty-first edition composed of four sections: Main Section, in which SENDA will be present; ZⓈONAMACO Ejes, ZⓈONAMACO Sur and ZⓈONAMACO Arte Moderno.

For this edition, we present a very wide range of artists, covering many artistic disciplines such as photography, sculpture and painting. With the clear objective of giving visibility to all facets of art, we also want to pay tribute to the country that hosts this fair.

 

GINO RUBERT

Son of a Mexican mother, Gino Rubert‘s art has always been influenced by his roots. Formally, he recognises himself as a child of the tradition that art must first seduce the eye through artifices such as trompe l’oeil and distortions, and from there invite us to reflect. Therefore, for ZⓈONAMACO we bring some of the works that the artist exhibited in SENDA in his last show ‘Cariàtide’ and that contain those deceptions that trap us inside the painting. In ‘Cariàtide’, Rubert moves the focus away from social and sentimental vanities, to put it on raw loneliness. Portraits of women trapped by the canvas, with clothes sculpted on it, whose figures are split by the frame, as if the limits of the canvas were trapping them in the same way as the entablature and the base hold the Greek caryatids (women-columns).

Collaboration:

 

 

JAUME PLENSA

On this occasion, the sculptures of the Catalan Jaume Plensa cross the ocean. The impressive 120-metre high work, ‘FLORA’, will be one of the highlights of our stand. The serenity of its face in contrast to its large dimensions reminds us of Plensa‘s genius in transmitting calm and reflection, yet the lively and dynamic environment in which his compositions are always found.

 

PETER HALLEY

The New Yorker Peter Halley will also be present at ZⓈONAMACO. Some of his iconic cells will travel to the fair to add a touch of light and colour to the space. Halley is one of the most influential artists on the international scene. He became known in the mid-eighties as the driving force behind the so-called Neo-Conceptualist movement. Although he uses geometry as a fundamental support for his works, he always insists on his figurative reference: the space and time of our society, its political and social terrain, and the closed order in which we live.

 

ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE

The presence of photography comes from Robert Mapplethorpe: eight of his black and white archive photographs will be exhibited at our stand. The tension of the photographed bodies, the dynamism of their forms, the naked skin of his models. As a whole, it is an ode to the artist’s work, to his essence and DNA as a photographer, conveying his purest style with this selection of works.

 

MIGUEL ÁNGEL RÍOS

A piece by Argentine artist Miguel Ángel Ríos will be exhibited in Mexico City, more specifically, one dedicated to the ancient capital of the Mexica Empire, Tenochtitlan. This conceptual artist explores themes of violence, power and human fragility. After studying in Buenos Aires and emigrating due to the dictatorship, he worked with maps and indigenous traditions, and since 2000 has focused on symbolic videos such as his iconic spinning tops. His work is in renowned collections such as the MoMA in New York or the Reina Sofía in Madrid.

 

TERESA SERRANO

Finally, the figure of the Mexican artist Teresa Serrano completes the proposal for our stand. Serrano‘s plastic work is based on a very solid political stance, which has a strong autobiographical relationship with her experience as a woman, but at the same time links the content of her works with themes and images clearly framed in the Mexican and international social context. Her embroidered leather and iron structures that will be exhibited at ZⓈONAMACO are a tangible annex of her ideology.

 

If you are spending a few days in Mexico City, come and see us at stand A104. We are sure that our proposal will not leave you indifferent!

Somoure at LOOP Fair 2024, MÓNICA RIKIĆ

Once again, SENDA participates in the new edition of LOOP Fair, a unique event that redefines the experience of art fairs by placing the moving image as the protagonist. This year, from October 19th to 21st at the Hotel Almanac Barcelona, SENDA brings an avant-garde proposal by Mónica Rikić, outstanding electronic artist and winner of the Premi Nacional de Cultura de Catalunya 2021. Her video essay entitled “Somoure” invites viewers to reflect on the future of assisted living through the use of robotic technologies.

 

“Somoure”: An artistic reflection on the future of assisted living

In this context, Mónica Rikić presents “Somoure”, a video that is part of her artistic research project, made in collaboration with the Institut de Robòtica i Informàtica Industrial (IRI UPC-CSIC) and funded by the European platform S+T+ARTS and the Catalan initiative Hac Te (Hub of Art, Science and Technology). “Somoure” raises crucial questions about how technology, especially assistive robotics, can transform the lives of the elderly in an ever-aging world. Through a narrative that combines visual essay with conceptual art, Rikić invites us to explore not only the benefits of these technologies, but also their ethical and social implications.

The work, conceptualized, directed and written by the artist herself, features the participation of Agustina Isidori as artistic director and audiovisual producer, and Rodolfo Venegas (Sonikgroove Studio) at the baton of the video’s original music. “Somoure” offers a critical and poetic look at the processes of creation of these technologies. It documents the process of developing assistive robots, from conception to implementation, and raises a series of questions about how these innovations can affect the daily lives of those who need them most. This video essay is more than just documentation; it is a window into the future of robotics and an invitation to reflect on the role of technology in human life.

 

The screening of “Somoure” at Manifesta 15

The relevance of “Somoure” transcends the borders of LOOP Fair. This video will also be part of Manifesta 15, the European nomadic biennial that, in 2024, comes to the metropolitan region of Barcelona. From September 8th to November 24th, Manifesta will carry out artistic interventions in historic spaces and unpublished industrial buildings, and in this context, “Somoure” will be presented at the monastery of Sant Cugat as a key piece that dialogues with technology and contemporary life.

 

About Mónica Rikić: A pioneering voice in art and technology

Born in Barcelona in 1986, Mónica Rikić has built an exceptional trajectory in the field of electronic art and technological research. Her work combines code and creative electronics with non-digital objects, creating interactive projects and robotic installations that challenge our preconceived ideas about technology. Her work focuses on alternative technology and open hardware, exploring how these tools can be used in innovative and accessible ways. Rikić has been exhibited in prestigious festivals and institutions around the world and her pieces are part of important contemporary art collections such as the .NewArt {foundation;}, the DKV Collection or the Col·lecció Nacional d’Art Contemporani de Catalunya.

 

SENDA at LOOP Fair: A collaboration that drives digital art forward

Galeria SENDA‘s participation in LOOP Fair with Mónica Rikić‘s work reaffirms its commitment to the promotion of digital and avant-garde art. “Somoure” not only represents this vision, but also opens new conversations about the future of assisted living and the impact of robotics on society.

The invitation is open to all those who wish to immerse themselves in Mónica Rikić‘s universe and reflect on the role technologies will play in tomorrow’s life. Loop Fair 2024 promises to be an unmissable meeting point for contemporary art, and SENDA, with “Somoure”, will occupy a prominent place in this narrative. See you at the Hotel Almanac!

Tous Les Oiseaux Du Monde at Loop Fair 2023, XAVI BOU

Within the framework of the LOOP Barcelona fair, SENDA gallery presents a creation by the artist Xavi Bou (Barcelona, ​​1979) titled All the birds of the World. This video was created following an invitation for an artistic residency held from 2020 to 2022 at the University of Leuven in Belgium. In it, working with teams from different faculties, the artist raises the hypothetical possibility of monitoring and calculating the total number of birds on the planet, through the generation of Artificial Intelligence models that allow individuals of all species to be identified.

The trend in our society, organized through Big Data, is to control all information and track any useful parameter, including those from nature. Bou questions whether we will be able to register all the living beings on the planet through the analysis of both structured and unstructured information as a possible nod in the fight against the climate crisis and the restoration of ecosystems and habitats.

Thomas More wrote the book “Utopia” in 1516. It was first published in Dirk Martens’ printing house in Leuven. The book coins the concept of utopia and describes an ideal and peaceful society where people live free and in harmony with nature. For Thomas More, the establishment of a new method of government had to be based on a tool that guaranteed excellence in business administration: mathematics.

More than 500 years later, the algorithms generated by Artificial Intelligence and its capacity for exponential advancement restore the notions of utopia and dystopia articulated in the work of Xavi Bou. The ability to predict, understand, and work autonomously, simulating human intelligence, opens new uncertain horizons that scare and excite us at the same time.

Likewise, Bou’s work reflects and questions the capacity for control and the impact on the freedom and security of individuals fostered by the newly available tools.

Fears about the risks of Artificial Intelligence seem to be prevailing over the hopes generated by new opportunities. Bou’s vision does not offer certain answers to open questions but points out the idea that the proper use of this technology depends on the ethics of those who develop it and the ability of users to control their privacy and protect their data.

This work was carried out sometime before the launch of ChatGPT and other platforms that only confirm all the doubts, fears, and, why not, hopes that the author invites us to question through a work it transcends the theme and genre it addresses.

 

 

📅 21 – 23 Nov. 2023
📍 Hotel Almanac Barcelona