The new MOD. annual exhibition launches this month, inviting visitors to reconsider the concept of time. Is it truly linear or are the past, present and future more connected than we realise? How do our memories shape these connections? As we reflect on time, we rarely pause to ask – what defines death?
The new thought-provoking exhibition FOREVER opens at MOD. at the University of South Australia on Tuesday 14 January. Adelaide’s future-focussed museum is open to visitors of all ages, though its exhibitions are aimed at youths in the 15 to 25 age bracket.
Visitors will explore the blurred lines of the concept of time through immersive and interactive experiences – talking to AI-powered digital avatars (MetaHumans), contemplating the universe through artist Gavin Wanganeen’s kinetic sculpture, evoking memories through a databank of scents and moving through a reflective infinity well.
Acting Director of MOD:
With FOREVER, we wanted to explore perceptions of time to expand our thinking about the future.Dr Lisa Bailey. Being able to take a different perspective of time is a useful skill that helps us think about complex problems that occur over long timescales.
The exhibition draws on expertise from over 30 researchers and experts in neuroscience, exercise science, sociology, anthropology and physics at UniSA as well as the University of Adelaide to create experiences that challenge our relationship with time, memory and aging.
In one exhibit, visitors will experience AI like never before. By stepping into a speculative future, visitors will meet and interact with an AI character who is recruiting employees for future jobs in ‘death tech’, with roles such as a ‘consciousness-uploading specialist’ or ‘cryogenics technician’.
Exhibition Lead, Claudia von der Borch:
These immersive, unscripted conversations with AI interviewers adapt dynamically to each visitor, using their input to shape the direction of the dialogue. The result is highly personalised experiences that challenge participants to explore the ethical, emotional and societal implications of technologies that could extend or transform life beyond death.
Season Details
Venue: Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne
Date: 14 Jan- 21 Nov 25
For more information click HERE
Producers have announced casting for the Australian debut of the Olivier Award nominated THE SHARK…
Hope Mill Theatre and Chris Harper Productions in association with Lowry are delighted to announce…
Drugs, guns and burning lust. Victorian Opera’s striking new production of The Coronation of Poppea…
One of Australia’s most acclaimed directors, Sarah Goodes (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Julia, The…
Fresh from presenting Yentl in London and now celebrating the success of Eurydice at forty…
The Tony Awards are never just about who gave the best performance or which production…