The making of nimiia cétiï, a new video installation by Jenna Sutela, created in collaboration with Somerset House Studios resident Memo Akten, and Damien Henry, Head of Innovation at the Google Arts & Culture Lab, as part of Google Arts & Culture’s artist-in-residence program n-Dimensions.
Jenna Sutela’s new audio-visual work nimiia cétiï is inspired by experiments in interspecies communication and aspires to connect with a world beyond our consciousness.
Documenting the interactions between a neural network, audio recordings of early Martian language, and footage of the movements of space bacteria, the work uses machine learning to generate a new form of communication.
Here, the computer is a shaman of the modern days, a medium, articulating messages from entities that cannot otherwise speak. Interpreting Martian originally channelled by French medium Hélène Smith in the nineteenth century, the machine simultaneously engages with the movements of an extremophilic bacterium called Bacillus subtilis which, according to recent spaceflight experimentation, could survive on Mars.
Mixing wetware and hardware, the project also portrays the computer as an alien of our creation.