色色啦

News

Finland's most significant media art award granted to artist Jenna Sutela

Aalto Media Lab graduate Jenna Sutela wins the 2020 AVEK Media Art prize
AVEK 2020
Photo by Suvi-Tuuli Kankaanp盲盲.

The 2020 AVEK Award has been awarded to internationally renowned artist Jenna Sutela (b. 1983), whose art studies artificial intelligence and interaction between species. She works diversely on audiovisual works, sculptures and performances.

The AVEK Award is an annual accolade for creative work, worth 15,000 euros. The award was presented today on 10 September 2020 at a ceremony in the Helsinki City Hall.

鈥業 am very honoured by this accolade for media art. This support creates room for experimental, independent work,鈥 Jenna Sutela rejoices. 鈥業 shall use this support prudently, in relation to and participating in the changing world, with environmental and equality issues at the centre.鈥

Sutela, who lives in Berlin, combines technology, biology and mysticism in her art. For example, the work nimiia c茅ti茂 in collaboration with the artist Memo Akten utilises machine learning, sound recordings of a fictitious Martian language and the movements of natt艒 bacteria. In I Magma, plastic lava lamp brains produce images for a mystical machine intelligence that predicts the future. The work functions as both a mobile application and a physical installation.

鈥楳y work focuses on interactions between species. The species I study include not only microorganisms but also learning machines,鈥 Sutela describes. 鈥楾he works are often created in collaboration with scientists and other artists. Communality and symbiosis are at the centre.鈥

Fundamental questions of humankind with a twinkle in the eye

The jury was convinced by Sutela鈥檚 uncompromisingly experimental art that combines elegant visuals with interesting stories. The works explore posthumanism and the limits of artificial intelligence while also addressing ethical issues.

鈥楾he idea of media art gains new dimensions through Jenna Sutela鈥檚 works,鈥 the jury describes in its statement. 鈥楾he basic idea of Sutela鈥檚 art is to reflect upon a fundamental question that has intrigued humankind, in a way that we already know from Frankenstein and the robot sagas of the last century. Can a machine live, grow and feel? Sutela seeks to deal with ethical issues 鈥 carefully, thoughtfully and yet with a twinkle in the eye.鈥

Sutela, a native of Turku, graduated in 2008 from the Master鈥檚 Programme in New Media at the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture. In 2019鈥2020, she has been working as an artist-in-residence at the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology in the United States.

Sutela鈥檚 works have been on display in numerous solo and group exhibitions in London, New York and Shanghai, for example. Last autumn, I Magma and the mobile application I Magma App were part of the exhibition Mud Muses: A Rant About Technology at Moderna Museet in Stockholm and Serpentine Galleries in London. In the spring and summer, she had a solo exhibition NO NO NSE NSE at Kunsthall Trondheim in Norway.

Read the article about Sutela in Helsingin Sanomat:
 

Sutela's video essay Holobiont (2018) can be watched on AVEK's website until 20.9.2020:

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A person walks past a colourful mural on a brick wall, illuminated by street lamps and electric lines overhead.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

New Academy Research Fellows and Academy Projects

A total of 44 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellowship and Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland 鈥 congratulations to all!
Two light wooden stools, one with a rectangular and one with a rounded structure, placed against a neutral background.
Research & Art Published:

Aalto University's Wood Studio's future visions of Finland's most valuable wood are presented at the Finnish Forest Museum Lusto

Curly birch 鈥 the tree pressed by the devil 鈥 exhibition will be on display in Lusto until March 15, 2026.
Five people with a diploma and flowers.
Awards and Recognition, Campus, Research & Art Published:

Spring term open science highlight: Aalto Open Science Award Ceremony

We gathered at A Grid to celebrate the awardees of the Aalto Open Science Award 2024 and discuss open science topics with the Aalto community.
Two interconnected circular loops; one blue labelled 'Simulation DBTL loop', one brown labelled 'Real-world DBTL loop'.
Awards and Recognition, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning 鈥 project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

Samuel Kaski receives ERC Advanced Grant to develop new machine learning that is robust, generalisable and engages human experts.