James Bridle 
Failing to Distinguish Between a Tractor Trailer and the Bright White Sky

James Bridle 
Failing to Distinguish Between a Tractor Trailer and the Bright White Sky

NOME

James Bridle, Untitled (Autonomous Trap 001), 2017. Ditone Archival Pigment Print, 150 x 200 cm. Courtesy of NOME.
April 19, 2017

James Bridle 
Failing to Distinguish Between a Tractor Trailer and the Bright White Sky

April 22–July 29, 2017
 
Opening: April 21, 6pm

NOME
Glogauer Straße 17
10999 Berlin
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 3–7pm

info [​at​] nomeproject.com

www.nomegallery.com
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NOME is pleased to announce Failing to Distinguish Between a Tractor Trailer and the Bright White Sky, a solo show by James Bridle, at the gallery’s new location in Kreuzberg.  

The title of this exhibition is taken from an accident report into a fatal crash involving an automobile whose self-driving system failed to alert its human driver to an oncoming hazard. The autonomous car and the issues it raises stand in for many of the questions facing us today—from our relationship to technology and artificial intelligence, to the automation of labour and the political opacity of complex systems.

James Bridle worked with software and geography to create the components for his own self-driving car: an autonomous vehicle which learns to get lost. Using freely available tools and research papers, through a process of engineering and self-education, the artist seeks to understand both how to appropriate contemporary technologies for divergent purposes, and, when necessary, how to resist them.

James Bridle is a British artist, writer, and theorist based in Athens. Bridle’s installations and works have been commissioned by the Serpentine Galleries, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Hayward Gallery, and The Photographers’ Gallery, London; FACT, Liverpool; the Istanbul Design Biennale and the Oslo Architecture Triennale. His work has been shown at major international institutions including the Barbican and the Whitechapel Gallery, London; KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin; Museum Angewandte Kunst, Frankfurt; ZKM, Karlsruhe; MoMA, New York; and the National Arts Center, Tokyo.

NOME
Founded in 2015, NOME operates between art, politics, and technology. By exploring the nodes of entanglements between these fields, NOME aims to raise critical awareness of the crucial issues facing our age.

For further information and sales inquiries, please contact Luca Barbeni or Manuela Benetton at info [​at​] nomeproject.com

For press and media inquiries, please contact Tabea Hamperl at press [​at​] nomeproject.com



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April 19, 2017

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