Skip to content
Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg, Machine Auguries: London. © Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg LCC. Courtesy of Bildmuseet. Photo: Malin Grönborg
Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg, Machine Auguries: London. © Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg LCC. Courtesy of Bildmuseet. Photo: Malin Grönborg

Press release -

Press Invitation: Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg / Machine Auguries

With AI-generated birdsong under an artificial dawn sky, Machine Auguries warns of our infatuation with technology at the expense of nature. In Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg’s immersive sound and light installation, which opens at Bildmuseet on 18 October, the dawn chorus is slowly taken over by synthetic birdsong.

The exhibition will be available for media previews by appointment from Monday, 14 October. Welcome to submit your request.

 As human actions decimate bird populations, artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg offers an imperfect replica of the dawn. The artist collated thousands of field recordings of bird species iconic to specific locations. These were used to train two neural networks working in a call-and-response process, a type of artificial intelligence called a Generative Adversarial Network, or GAN. Reflecting on how birds develop their song from listening to one another, each cycle or “epoch” of the machine’s learning is revealed as the GAN veers towards fidelity. As the dawn chorus progresses, the artificial birdsong becomes increasingly lifelike. We are no longer sure what is real when the chorus falls silent at the end of the work.

Capturing the experience of a place, Machine Auguries is an expanding archive of vanishing local realities. This collection celebrates the uniqueness of ecosystems but reminds us of their interconnectedness, as bird species repeat. As we play back these imperfect copies of the dawn inside the gallery, Machine Auguries reminds us of the impossibility of recreating nature and the urgent need to protect it.

Bildmuseet brings together three iterations of Machine Auguries for the first time. The first two recreate the dawn in London (2019) and Toledo, Ohio (2023), and are presented throughout the exhibition. In January 2025, a site-specific Umeå chorus will be added to the series. 

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg (b. 1982) is a multidisciplinary artist based in London. Her practice examines humans’ fraught relationship with nature and technology. Her work has been shown worldwide, including at MoMA, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; the Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the Royal Academy, London. She has a PhD from the Royal College of Art. In 2023, she won the S+T+ARTS Grand Prize – Artistic Exploration from the European Commission for her interspecies living artwork Pollinator Pathmaker. This is the artist’s first solo presentation in Sweden. 

Machine Auguries, developed with Curator and Guest Professor Sarah Cook, is the first of two exhibitions at Bildmuseet that explore our future with AI technologies. The exhibition, which runs until 6 April 2025, is produced by Bildmuseet with support from Kempestiftelserna, the Arctic Centre at Umeå University and WASP-HS. Special thanks to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology | Macaulay Library for their support of this artwork.  

PRESS PREVIEWS FROM 14 OCTOBER 
The exhibition will be available for media previews by appointment from Monday, 14 October. Please submit your request to press.bildmuseet@umu.se.
Press images
. 

OPENING ON ART FRIDAY, 18 OCTOBER
Welcome speech by Director Katarina Pierre at 19:00, followed by an artist talk by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg in conversation with Sarah Cook, Curator. Sound performance at 21:30: Improvising with Algorithms by Michael Lukaszuk. The evening will also see the opening of the exhibition Aseel AlYaqoub / The View from Above. Tours, creative workshop, live concert by Christian Kjellvander, DJs, bar and restaurant.

TALKS AND EVENTS
Throughout the exhibition, we will offer guided tours, talks, workshops and other events inspired by its theme. 

 Contact information 
Requests for preview and interviews:
Helena Vejbrink, Media Contact 
helena.vejbrink@bildmuseet.umu.se, +46 90 786 9073 

Further information about the exhibition:
Brita Täljedal, Museum Curator 
brita.taljedal@bildmuseet.umu.se, +46 90 786 7714 

Related links

Topics

Categories


Bildmuseet is one of Sweden’s foremost venues for international contemporary art and visual culture. The exhibitions are produced in collaboration with artists, museums and universities worldwide, and often attract both national and international attention. As a visitor, you are invited to participate in guided tours and creative workshops, listen to artist talks, debates, lectures and live music, watch film screenings and attend other events.

Housed in an acclaimed building at the Umeå Arts Campus, right next to the Umeå Academy of Fine Arts, Umeå Institute of Design and Umeå School of Architecture, Bildmuseet is a part of Umeå University – one of Sweden's largest institutions of higher education with over 36000 students and 4,000 employees. It is a multifaced university where studies and research within the creative realm make up an important part of the university's cornerstone.

Contacts

Helena Vejbrink

Helena Vejbrink

Communication officer Bildmuseet +46 90 786 9073

Umeå University

Umeå University is a comprehensive university and one of Sweden’s largest higher education institutions with around 38,000 students and 4,600 staff. We have a diverse range of high-quality educational programmes and research within all disciplinary domains and the arts. Umeå University is also where the groundbreaking CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing tool was discovered, starting a revolution in genetic engineering that led to the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

The University has an international atmosphere and centres its work around core academic values. Our tightly knit campus makes it easy to meet, collaborate and share knowledge, something that encourages a dynamic and open culture where we celebrate each other’s successes. Umeå University prides itself in offering a world-class educational and research environment and expanding knowledge of global significance, where the sustainable development goals of Agenda 2030 inspire and motivate. We have creative and innovative research environments that offer the best potential for taking on the challenges facing society. Through long-term collaborations with organisations, industry and other higher education institutions, the University is helping northern Sweden become a knowledge region. The societal transformation and the massive investments currently occurring in northern Sweden create complex challenges but also opportunities. Umeå University is focused on conducting research about and within a society in transition and continuing to offer academic programmes for regions that need to expand quickly and sustainably.

Campus Umeå and the Umeå Arts Campus are close to the city centre and next to one of Sweden’s largest and most renown university hospitals. Education is also provided in several other towns, including Skellefteå, Örnsköldsvik, Lycksele and Kiruna. Umeå University is home to the highly ranked Umeå Institute of Design, the environmentally certified School of Business, Economics and Law, and the School of Architecture, the only one in Sweden with an artistic profile. Next door is Bildmuseet, which is Umeå’s contemporary art museum, and Curiosum, Umeå’s science centre. Umeå University is one of Sweden’s five national sports universities, has an internationally leading Arctic Research Centre, and has Várdduo, which is Sweden’s only research unit for Sámi research and indigenous research.