Sarah Meyohas
Sarah Meyohas is a French-American artist working across disciplines including film, photography, virtual reality, performance art and sculpture.
Intro:
Sarah Meyohas is a visual artist working across media. For her project Cloud of Petals, she staged a performance at the site of the former Bell Labs. Sixteen workers photographed 100,000 individual rose petals, compiling a massive dataset. This information was used to map out an artificial intelligence algorithm that learned to generate new, unique petals forever.
The performance resulted in a film, six gaze-based virtual reality experiences, and a series of sculptures, presented during a large-scale solo exhibition at Red Bull Arts New York. The Cloud of Petals exhibition becomes a site for contemplation about a post-human reality and the future of labor in the face of automation. The film has been screened at various festivals, including the Minneapolis St Paul International Film Festival, Slamdance, NY Times Talks, CogX, and the Locarno Film Festival.
Previously, her 2015 cryptocurrency Bitchcoin and Stock Performance at 303 Gallery have also explored networks of information, power, value, and communication. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Wired, Vice, Fortune, Nowness, The Atlantic and she appeared on the cover of the 20th-anniversary edition of Flaunt Magazine. She has appeared on CNBC, PBS, and CBC, and was listed on Forbes 30 Under 30 and Cultured 30 Under 35.
Meyohas holds a B.A. in international relations from the University of Pennsylvania and a B.S. in finance from the Wharton School. In 2015 she received an M.F.A. from Yale University.
Selected AI projects:
Meyohas on her AI artwork Cloud of Petals:
“Petals cannot digitize themselves. Human hands must individually open the flower, pick the petal, place it under the lens, press the shutter, and upload the image to the cloud. Then again, and again, and again. Computers document the signals generated by humans. When computers were human, they were often women.
In August, 10,000 roses were placed in the atrium of Bell Works. The work of photographing the individual petals and turning them into a dataset was performed by sixteen men. The photographs, a sequence of petals, reenact the rose. Beauty compels the act of replication.
The workers set aside the petals they considered most beautiful which were pressed to create a physical subset. The transmission of an understanding lies latent in the aesthetic choice — the decisive moment.
Glass exists simply not to exist. The impartial mechanics of the camera allow the petals, from which electronic pulses detach, to convert and converge as pixels, bits of color. Messages come in and out of the theater of digits.
The bit of information was invented at Bell Labs. One binary code for all, whose electronic signals are amplified by the transistor — on and off, expressed as a 1 or 0. He loves me, he loves me not. He loves me and we are one. If he does not, we are two. Two ones. When he is lost, he becomes zero. The addition of not.
The Bell Labs Holmdel Complex was completed in 1962, one year after the death of its architect Eero Saarinen. Entirely mirrored, the building reflects its pastoral environs perfectly, mapping them onto its modernist grid. The transistor, the laser, and the very ones and zeroes of information theory are among the many breakthroughs that came from the two million square feet of mind space inside.
In 1984, the Bell System was first broken up, and subsequently downsized as the nature of scientific research adapted to corporate needs. Bell had ushered in the age of information; the building was abandoned and nearly demolished. The walls resonated, the whiteboards still bearing formulas and the switchboards numbered by hand. In August 2016, the building was being revitalized as multi-purpose space by Somerset Development -- now, Bell Works.
Latent variables lie hidden. They are not directly observed, but are rather inferred through a mathematical model from other variables that are observed and directly measured. The advantage of latent variables is that they reduce the dimensionality of data. A large number of observable variables can be aggregated in a model to represent an underlying concept. In this sense, they serve a function similar to that of a theory. At the same time, latent variables link observations in the real world to symbols in the modeled world.
Optical scales shift values. The ground on which the men worked is a pattern originally created by Josef Albers. He noted that, “just as colors enter into relationships with each other, the superficial forms we note with our fingertips and with our eyes enter into relationships with each other.” Older petals are softer.
The haptic illusion arises. An act of touch may reproduce itself as a smell or a thought: the odor of a rose finding the breath of a long absence. To create mental images we use the same neuronal paths that make up material sensory perception.
This film is caused by the scene — the workers and the petals in the building reflecting light in such a way as to cause a trace on the light sensitive emulsion of the negative, like a pointed finger. The analogue becomes more pronounced side to side with the digital — as in, upon a technological evolution.
The representation of tonalities on the emulsion is continuous. The numerical code of a digital image, ultimately reduced to ones and zeros, is discrete. The analogue transcribes, making the image inseparable from the physical properties of the scene. The digital converts into pixels, exactly reproducible. There is the petal, and then there is the photograph of the petal. From that moment onwards, the separation only grows.
Thousands of images of petals will pulse through wires and populate servers. The archive, a machine readable location, or the act of transferring data becomes a compulsion. Repetition produces what it repeats. Rose petals touch rose petals — the accumulation and safe-keeping of petals as the transmission of information, a sustained set of acts.
The last act: to hold the terabytes of digital data alongside the preserved petals themselves as both archives. The loving search: is color imbedded into the material object, in the way that the data is embedded as ones and zeroes? The genetic code of a rose, an archive of our desire.
The petals are in the cloud. The field of critical interpretation is open. The petals, all one hundred thousand, are used as inputs for an artificial neural network. Each neural unit is connected to many others, and together create a system that is self-learning and trained, rather than programmed.
Generative adversarial networks are a branch of unsupervised machine learning — implemented by a system of two neural networks competing against each other in a game. One is a generator and one is a discriminator. The 100,000 images of petals serve as the training data from which it can learn its attributes: the color and vibrancy, shape and contour, pattern of the pixels.
The generator is taught to map from a latent space to the set of petals in order to generate new images. The discriminator is simultaneously taught to discriminate between real petals and generated petals.
The generator adjusts the parameters of the latent space in order to generate petals that will fool the discriminator. These parameters can create an n-dimensional space in which all petals can be mapped, like points. This latent space is vast, generating new, unique petals forever.
We will never find an image of a petal stored inside the human brain. Seeing something in its absence is far less accurate than seeing something in its presence. The vast pattern of neurons in our minds, were it simulated in a computer, would mean nothing outside of the human body. Whereas computers can maintain exact images of petals that can remain exactly the same forever, even if the power has been turned off, the human brain maintains our mind only as long as it remains alive. The ultimate separation of consciousness to a material body is dispelled with a field of petals. “
Meyohas’ solo exhibitions:
2019
Infinite Void, Galerie Pact, Paris, FR
2018
Speculations, Wasserman Projects, Detroit, MI
Sarah Meyohas, Disjecta Contemporary, Portland, OR
2017
Sarah Meyohas, Independent Régence, Brussels, BE
Sarah Meyohas, Galerie Pact, Paris, FR
2016
2015
BitchCoin, Where, Brooklyn, NY
Meyohas’ film festivals:
Locarno Film Festival
Slamdance Film Festival
Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival
Chicago Underground Film Festival
Milwaukee Underground Film Festival
Brooklyn Film Festival
TimesTalk x Absolut Art, New York City, NY
Meyohas’ group exhibitions:
2018
Adventitious Encounters, Open Space Contemporary, London, UK
2017
Tu es Métamorphose, Galerie Pact, Paris, FR
From DADA to TA-DA, Curated by Max Wolf, Fisher Parrish, New York, NY
99 Cents or Less, Curated by Jens Hoffman, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, MI
Escape Attempts: Curated by Dr. Kathy Battista, Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles, CA, Brooklyn, NY
2016
Legal Tender, The Alice Gallery, Seattle, WA
2015
Black Mirror, Aperture Foundation, New York, NY
Lovely Dark, Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA
Lovely Dark, Danziger Gallery, New York, NY
viewer DISCRETION..the Children of BATAILLE, Stux Gallery, New York, NY
NEWD Art Fair, Brooklyn, NY
LUX: Ideas through Light, Beinecke Plaza, Yale University, New Haven, CT
Business As Usual, Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun, Leeds, UK
2014
Yale MFA 2015, Yale School of Art Green Hall Gallery, New Haven, CT
2013
For Ed: Splendor in the Grass with Olympic Lad & Lass, Yale School of Art Green Hall Gallery, New Haven, CT Curated by Samuel Messer
I like it when the girls, Hundred Forsyth, New York, NY
Curated by Margaret Kross & Suzie Oppenheimer
Photo Istanbul Exhibition, Meyerson Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Troupe, Addams Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
2012
Moby-Dick, Addams Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Corpus Corporum, Philomathean Art Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
2011
SVA Summer Residency Exhibition, Westside Gallery, New York, NY
Meyohas’ speaking engagements:
2019
7x7 Conference, New Museum, New York, NY
2018
Public Talks of the Locarno Film Festival in conversation with Jürgen Schmidhuber, Locarno, Switzerland
2016
Guest Lecture, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
Visiting Artist, Sotheby's Institute, NY, NY
2015
NEWD Talks: Beyond Resale Royalties – Pro-Artist Market Maneuvers, Panel | Sarah Meyohas, Neal Curley (Essex Street Gallery) and Kenneth Schlenker (artlist.co), moderated by Dr. Natasha Degen
Swiss Institute, New York: Panel | Sarah Meyohas, Lucy Hunter and R. Lyon, Jenny Jaskey, and Laurel Ptak Discuss BitchCoin
Meyohas’ awards and residencies:
2011
Residency at the School of Visual Arts, New York, NY
2010
Institute of Contemporary Art (Philadelphia, PA) Advisory Board Member (2010-2013)
Juror’s Award, University of Pennsylvania
Meyohas’ selected press:
2018
Molly Simon, Sarah Meyohas, Flaunt Magazine, 20th Anniversary Issue Volume Two, August 2018
Kathryn O'Regan, The Mirror Images So Meta They'll Make You Question Reality, Sleek, April 2018
Kelsey Gray, Sarah Meyohas at Disjecta, The Rib, January 2018
2017
Matt Levine, This Artist Is Giving the Stock Market the Finger, Bloomberg View, November 2017
Paul Maziar, 10,000 Roses Later: Sarah Meyohas's 'Cloud of Petals', Oregon ArtsWatch, December 2017
Alice Newell-Hanson, This Artist Created an Infinite Cloud of Rose Petals, i-D Vice, October 2017
Catherine Hong, Sarah Meyohas Creates Virtual Reality Art with 100,000 Petals, Galerie Magazine
Michael Slenske, Female artists turn minimalism on its head at Shulamit Nazarian's new Hollywood Gallery, Wallpaper Magazine
2016
Sarah Cascone, 14 Emerging Women Artists to Watch in 2017, Artnet
Samantha Drake, At the Intersection of Art and Finance, The Pennsylvania Gazette
Nicole Bray, Artist Spotlight: Sarah Meyohas, Art + Real Estate
Matt Levine, Politics, Polls, Art and Bribery, BloombergView
Andrew Nunes, 10,000 Roses Infiltrate the Bell Labs Holmdel Complex, The Creators Project
Kat Herriman, On Site with Sarah Meyohas at Bell Labs' Temporary Flower Factory, Artnet
Bourree Lam, Making Performance Out of the Stock Market, The Atlantic
Ken Johnson, Here's How an Artist Plays the Stock Market, New York Times
Dylan Kerr, The New Paint-by-Numbers? Sarah Meyohas, Artspace
Michael Kaplan, Meet the artist who manipulates stock prices for paintings, New York Post
Valentina Zarya, Meet The Artist Who Paints the Stock Market, Fortune
Kat Herriman, An Art Performance That Takes Stock – Literally, T Magazine
Scott Indrisek, Amid Market Gloom, An Artist Stocks Up, Blouin Art Info
2015
Corrina Kirsch, Will 'BitchCoin' Offer Artists a New Way to Make a Living? Vice
Katie Booth, Woman of Wall Street: New York City artist launches Bitchcoin, New York Times
Stinson, Liz, BitchCoin: A New Cryptocurrency for Buying Art and Investing in the Artist, WIRED
Sarina Finkelstein, An Artist Mints Her Own Take on Bitcoin, Time
John Zarobell, Art as Asset: Financialization and the Art Market, San Francisco Arts Quarterly #20
2014
2013
Joel Mathis, Business Idea: Selling Nude Pics Featuring Penn’s Huntsman Hall, Philadelphia Magazine
Daniel Blas, This Woman Did WHAT In Huntsman?!, Under the Button - 34th Street Magazine
Meyohas’ education:
2015
Yale University, M.F.A.
2013
University of Pennsylvania, Huntsman Program in International Studies & Business
College of Arts & Sciences, B.A. International Studies
Wharton School, B.S. Economics
Magna Cum Laude
Learn more about Sarah Meyohas:
Sarah Meyohas’ website: http://www.sarahmeyohas.com/
Sarah Meyohas’ gallery: http://www.meyohas.com/
Sarah Meyohas on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sarahmeyohas/?hl=en
Sarah Meyohas on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sarahmeyohas?lang=en