
, a touring exhibition at MAK, Vienna, 21 June to 1 October
ABOVE the exhibits in the first room of Hello, Robot, a large sign asks: āHave you ever met a robot?ā Easy enough. But the questions keep on coming, and by the end of the exhibition, weāre definitely not in Kansas any more: āDo you believe in the death and rebirth of things?ā is not a question you want to answer in a hurry. Nor is my favourite, the wonderfully loaded āDo you want to become better than nature intended?ā
That we get from start to finish of the show in good order, not just informed but positively exhilarated, is a testament to the wiliness of the three curating institutions: the Vitra Design Museum in Germany, the Design Museum Ghent in Belgium, and MAK in Austria.
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One of the showās advisors, architect Carlo Ratti, head of the MIT Senseable City Lab, nails the trouble with such shows: āAny environment, any city, any landscape can become a robot when it is equipped with sensors, actuators and intelligence.ā By the time robots do useful work, they have vanished. Once, we called traffic lights ārobotsā, now, we barely see them.
Robots, an exhibition currently at Londonās Science Museum, gets caught in this bind. By following a āscience fiction becomes science factā trajectory, it creates a show that gets more boring as you work your way through it. Hello, Robot is much cannier: it knows that while science fiction may spin off real artefacts now and again, it never becomes science fact. Does writing down a dream stop you dreaming? Of course not.
Hello, Robot is about design. Its curators explore not only what we have made, but also what we have dreamed. Fine art, speculative designs, commercial products, comic books and movie clips are arranged together to create a glimpse of the robotās place in our lives and imaginations. Far from disappearing, robots seem more likely to be preparing a jail-break.
āThe longings and anxieties that robots are meant to address are as ancient as they are unrealisableā
The longings, fantasies and anxieties that robots are meant to address are as ancient as they are unrealisable. The robot exists to do what we can imagine doing, but would rather not do. They were going to mow our lawns, now weāre glad of the exercise and we might prefer to have them feed our babies ā or look after much older people, as Dan Chenās 2012 End of Life Care Machine envisions.
This robot mechanically strokes a dying patient ā a rather dystopian provocation, or so Chen thought until some visitors asked to buy one. Exhibited here, Chenās piece is accompanied by a note he wrote: should he encourage people to leave family members alone in their final hours or deny them the comfort of a machine?
Hello, Robot asks difficult questions in a thrillingly designed setting. It is a show to take the children to (just try not to let them see your face in Room 3 as you check on a computer to see if your jobās about to be automated).
Thereās a deep seriousness about this show; if design teaches us anything, it is that no one is ever in charge of the future. āThe question of whether we need, or even like [robots] is not really ours to ask,ā a wallboard opines. āDo we actually need smartphones? Ten years ago, most people would probably have answered no.ā Our roles in this ālifeworldā of the future are still to be defined.
Catching the exhibition in Germany, I go round three times until itās late. I adore industrial robot YuMiās efforts to roll a ball up a steep incline, and I grin as I walk past a clip of the automated kitchen in Jacques Tatiās 1958 film Mon Oncle. Still, I canāt quite take my eyes off a 2005 photograph of a Chinese factory by Edward Burtynsky, who visited Chinaās shipyards and industrial plants. Identical figures performing identical actions remind me of iconic British newspaper sketches of weaving machines from the industrial revolution.
We have not outgrown the need for human regimentation ā we simply outsource it to cheaper humans. Whether robots become cheap enough to undercut poor people, and what happens if they do, are big questions. But this show can bear them.
This article appeared in print under the headline āBraving the futureā