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These disciplines range from animation and visual arts to architecture, curation, broadcasting, immersive storytelling, gaming, virtual reality (VR), and augmented reality (AR).
Hosted by the French Institute of South Africa (IFAS) in partnership with French studio u2p050, and Playtopia Festival the programme, starting tomorrow, 29 October, will merge cutting-edge AI technology with artistic and cultural narratives.
The participants will explore AI's potential to reshape how we understand and represent historical events.
During the programme, the participants will engage in workshops, mentorships, and a collaborative exhibition, to create AI-generated visual and auditory representations of unrecorded or marginalised histories.
By blending AI with traditional historical research, participants can redefine storytelling and gain critical insight into the ethical implications of generating synthetic historical content.
The programme will culminate in a series of AI-generated short films or interactive experiences, which will be showcased at the Playtopia Festival in Cape Town from 6 to 7 December 2024.
The cohort represents a cross-section of creative professionals interested in AI and its application across various disciplines ranging from animation and visual arts to architecture, curation, broadcasting, immersive storytelling, gaming, virtual reality (VR), and augmented reality (AR).
The 2024 cohort includes creatives exploring themes ranging from environmental and social justice to the reimagining of marginalised histories.
“The participants have motivated their involvement with the programme based on myriad potential outcomes,” says Emmanuelle Denavit-Feller, regional head of new media, film & music at IFAS.
“From investigating the potential for archives and redefining historical documentation and interpretation and reconstructing neglected histories to pushing boundaries in AI storytelling and environmental and social justice issues, to ‘destabilising’ dominant narratives.
“These are all exciting pioneering possibilities that IFAS proudly supports.”
Unrecorded Voices is supported by IFAS, and the Institut français in Paris, and forms part of Novembre Numérique (Digital November), a global initiative celebrating digital cultures.