Overview
- The autogenerative system was trained on Cervantes’ text alongside a broad contemporary bibliography that includes gender, ecological and philosophical perspectives.
- A glass chamber holds eight cubic meters of La Mancha air, and visitors blow on suspended feathers to activate fans that prompt the AI to write new fragments projected in the gallery.
- Over the run through March 8, the process will produce five books that the public can read online and download from the project’s website.
- The exhibition features an AI-generated interview with Miguel de Cervantes and a first copy of the Quijote 2.0 encoded in synthetic DNA as a book-object.
- Artist Solimán López presents the work as a critical inquiry into authorship and technology, highlighting wind power’s promise alongside harms such as turbine-related bird deaths.