Antibodies - CODAworx

Antibodies

Client: Aurora Festival Dallas - WNDR Museum - Dubai Design Week - Open Media Festival Seoul, Korea - PRECTXE Seoul, Korea

Location: Montreal, QC, Canada

Completion date: 2020

Project Team

Artist

Daniel Iregui

iregular

Coding

Hugo St-Onge

Iregular

Coding

Guillaume Turgeon

Iregular

Coordinator

Maryline Lacombe

Iregular

Overview

As we are becoming increasingly jaded and disconnected from other people, ANTIBODIES reflects on how detached we are during video conference calls – today’s imposed form of social gatherings. It also questions our vulnerability in the face of these overpowering platforms that force us to give up our privacy and the intimacy of real-life interactions we once took for granted.

ANTIBODIES is an interactive experience that mimics this phenomenon and creates a similar virtual get-together. As people join, a system tracks the elicited facial expressions of participants, responding with overlaid visual and audio patterns. After each interaction, people’s recorded experiences are added to a gallery of disembodied human beings.

Web Version

ANTIBODIES is a hybrid artwork: initially taking the form of a website anyone can join at any time, it naturally developed into a physical installation for public spaces too as lockdown measures progressively eased. So far, more than 20,000 people from 48 different countries have taken part in the online experience accessible here: www.antibodies.webcam.
Both formats use CURSOR, a proprietary technology combining optics, AI and machine learning in the tracking features. ANTIBODIES is a reflection and critique that clearly manifests the intersect.

Goals

Initially created during the pandemic-induced lockdown as an interactive web experience, ANTIBODIES developed into a physical installation for public spaces as lockdown measures progressively eased.

Adopting a hybrid format, ANTIBODIES is able to broadly extend its reach, also appealing to diverse social groups that might’ve not been interested otherwise. Additionally, it provides security in today’s unstable world: ANTIBODIES exist beyond any restrictions, able to accompany people from the first lockdown to the reopening of all public spaces.
The piece can also be presented indoors and outdoors, night and day, which makes for a modular installation able to elevate any public space.

Additional Information

With no other options to sustain our social human nature, we are forced to engage with the virtual communication platforms, no questions asked. On top of the security risks, we also become completely exposed as these technologies listen to our conversations, track our movements and study our behaviours. ANTIBODIES brings this to light by clearly visualizing the active tracking action with overlaid graphics that follow our faces’ every move. The piece also highlights the issue of self-awareness: in real life you only see others around you, never yourself, whereas in this “new normal” scenario you are also in the crowd you perceive, which can provoke a plethora of emotions from susceptibility to restraint and insecurity. Finally, it points to how easy it is to be “present” yet completely absent-minded in such contexts, pretending to pay attention only by being in front of a screen.