Thursday, July 21, 2022

Wisdom of AI Light - Illuminate Adelaide - Review


The first 10 minutes of Wisdom of AI Light is totally bewitching. You are suddenly in the womb of a space that is shifting and swirling all around you. An exquisite soundtrack helps you centre as you drift aimlessly around trying to find where to be. You can wander, stand, sit, or turn but most people found their space quickly and remained still – mesmerised. Pictures and patterns and shapes fold and bend and soar in an ever-changing visual landscape that evokes childlike wonder. The Da Vinci segment teased with glimpses of the known – the Mona Lisa, Christ, and Vitruvian Man – before dissolving back into an abstract world of a different kind of beauty. The kind of beauty that results from artificial intelligence going to work on 20,000 of Da Vinci’s artworks. (One can’t watch this without wondering what Da Vinci may have thought of this if he were alive today!)

Occasionally in this short 30 minute show we are reminded of the raw data that is the basis of these projections and surrounded by thousands of thumbnail sketches scrolling rapidly past in multiple directions.

The Poetic AI segment churns out electronic wizardry from the text and images of great thinkers of the past. Letters, numbers, shapes form new creations that might be called a new kind of literacy – a literacy based on sensation rather than thought, on feeling rather than meaning.

The Data Monolith segment explodes the past literally as archaeological stonework bursts into fragments and spin out across the room to later reform as solid walls.

Everything is changing all of the time whichever way you look and in a strange way you start to go a bit numb and wonder about yourself in all of this. Where do I belong in this new form of expression? It’s all extraordinary; blindingly dazzling. Because we know the raw material for this production stems from history’s greatest minds and some of humanity’s greatest achievements it is hard not to dwell on what it all might mean. Or is it better to turn off your cognitive self and just immerse yourself in the wonder of it all?

Musically the show divides quite radically into two parts. The flowing, soothing score from Ludovici Einaudi is utterly compatible with Da Vinci’s time. The music for the other segments was much more abrasive, modern, mechanical – robotic even. Returning to something more ethereal for the segments connected to space and dark matter might have served to better separate them thematically and maintain the level of interest towards the end of the show.

Shakespeare’s words were probably incorporated in the Poetic segment somewhere. It was he who wrote ‘full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” The Wisdom of AI Light felt a bit like that. Like a metaphor for contemporary times, it is fast moving, seductive, random, visually astounding, and shows off incredibly impressive use of emerging technologies – it all looks and sounds so impressive. It looks and sounds as if it should all be deeply meaningful. It is immensely entertaining, but I suspect life’s mysteries are more likely to be solved sitting under a tree on a sunny day, or by the sea at sunset.

(This article also published on The Clothesline.)

Monday, July 11, 2022

Catherine Alcorn & Phil Scott – 30 Something

Catherine Alcorn in 2012

 

[CABARET ~ ADELAIDE PREMIERE ~ AUS]

Space Theatre, Fri 10 Jun.

New Year’s Eve. 1939. Deep in the bosom of a Sydney speakeasy. Expectations for the future are high and our hosts Phil Scott and Catherine Alcorn are there to help us bring in the New Year with good-natured repartee, predictable puns, double entendres and a great selection of show tunes of the time.

It’s a great format that works really well. After a time apart, Phil and Catherine are very happy to be playing with each other again. Phil Scott’s hands dance deftly up and down the piano while serving up punchlines and interjections to complement Catherine’s stories. Alcorn is as vivacious as ever. She’s enjoying being back in Australia again after a tour of the US, and she serves up the expected diet of big ballads, heartfelt confessions, and tawdry humour. She belts out the big numbers with ease, and teases with quieter endings to some songs that show a more subtle side of her vocal ability.

As it always seems to be, these were also difficult times for musicians trying to make a living and we’re treated to a couple of humorous live advertisements on stage that bring back fond memories. We’re also advised about what to do if there is a police raid – the law was always hot on the trail of establishments selling illegal alcohol!

If we didn’t have retrospective knowledge about the horror that was about to be unleashed on the world in 1939 30 Something might have convinced me that 1939 was a good time to be alive – great songs, musicians who entertained, a sense of fun, eager audience interaction, and lots of dumb jokes. Just for an hour I was back there in another era that despite the bawdy nature of much the banter, felt ironically innocent.

(This review also published on The Clothesline.)

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