You are on page 1of 2

SALTS

proudly presents

Katj a Novi tskova s
Green Growth

Today, once agai n, a meteori te has hi t the garden

And again, civilization has been put to sleep for long enough to allow it to fall into
complete oblivion. They will find traces, fragments, hints. Green arrows,
aluminium boards with remnants of brightly-colored feathers, piercing blue eyes,
cigarette butts, dead insects, earth-scented plasma and plastic stones.

How will they possibly imagine the exponential technological turn that took place
right before the end? The omnipresence of humanoid computers, consequence of
a goofed evolution, had changed the brain functions and affected major geologic
and atmospheric patterns, unleashing anti-Cartesian and phantasmagoric
knowledge among humans.

()

The beauty of a salto mortale is largely shaped by the chaos that precedes it; a
turmoil of emotions, knowledge, progress, and power. A productive anarchy often
triggered by a significant innovation.

The month Katja Novitskovas Green Growth opens, three remarkable
evolutionary incidents have been related in the news. My attention was caught
after noticing a significant number of reposts and likes. My selection. Their
attention.

As a result of what Im tempted to call an awry technological metamorphosis,
plastic rocks have recently been found in Hawaii. A consequence of geological
mutation, plastiglomerate are a new type of rock made of plastic, sand,
seashells, corals, and volcanic gravel. A new material is formed artificially-
naturally in waste dumps, where fragments of plastic can be melted by a heat
source, be it a volcanic eruption or a forest fire.

Nature adapting to technological surplus. Alarmed scientists fear the
overexposure to screens might result in a lasting attention deficit, while anxious
Christians dread Pope Francis would baptize aliens. ADD is the new multitasking.
The brain adapts to higher frequency cycles, to lol cats Who are we to close
the doors?

!"#$%&?

Meanwhile a chatbot is wrongly reported to have passed the Turing test, which
requires a machine to convince human interrogators during a series of keyboard
conversations that it itself is also human. An army of analysts fearing for the AI
pioneers credibility managed to widely disprove the claim, between the early
hours of the 9th of June and late afternoon on the 10th. Witnessing the agitation
on social networks such possibility triggered, I thought: the fox is in the
henhouse; soon enough the oldest sci-fi fantasy will become a reality. It made
me feel alive.

Today the fake trees look more beautiful than the actual trees in the garden.
Coated with a high-tech UV protection film, they will survive the end of the world.
They will show them how beautiful and real nature should look like. When all the
organic woods are gone, those amputated ones will remain, here, for the next
generations, forever.


Elise Lammer, Berlin, June 2014

This tale was written on the occasion of Katja Novitskovas solo exhibition Green
Growth curated by Samuel Leuenberger at SALTS, 19 June 19 July 2014

With the kind philosophico-technological input from Spencer Mansfield Ashby.

You might also like