HOUSTON, TX.- From animatronic sculptures that breathe and flicker like prehistoric lifeforms to generative software designed to carry on her practice after death, Anicka Yi approaches technology not as an instrument of control, but as a creative partner. Her concept of the biologized machine conjures hybrid beings that blur the boundaries between the organic and the syntheticentities that feel both futuristic and deeply ancient. Drawing on deep-sea microbes, algorithmic avatars, and spiritual systems of thought, Yi reveals the invisible forcesbiological, technological, and metaphysical that shape our shared and uncertain futures.
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Anicka Yi: Karmic Debt brings to Houston two complementary installations: a suite of five of her Radiolaria sculptures and the immersive video Each Branch Of Coral Holds Up the Light Of the Moon. Both installations dissolve boundaries between biology and technology, proposing new ways of thinking about perception, sentience, and survival across human and nonhuman realms, asking us to reimagine how lifeand artmight evolve, mutate, and persist. The exhibition will be on view at the MFAH June 29 September 7, 2025, in the museums Cullinan Hall.
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Anicka Yi shows us that it is possible to use AI systems to express our most human concerns, as she invites viewers to consider our place in ever-evolving cycles of creation and change, noted Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH. We are enormously pleased to present these two captivating installations, and to welcome Yis extraordinary work into the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, with our recent acquisition of Each Branch Of Coral Holds Up the Light Of the Moon.
Yi frames these two installations through the multifaceted lens of Karmic Debt: as a meditation on invisible systems of accountability that span Buddhist cycles of cause and effect, ecological and political retribution, interspecies ethics, inherited trauma, and the moral pressures of living in a world shaped by financial and environmental imbalance. In this context, debt is not only economicit is also emotional, spiritual, and relational, connected to the air we breathe, the histories we inherit, and the responsibilities we carry toward others, both human and more-than- human. What do we owe to each otheracross species, generations, and lifetimes? What traces do we leave behind? And how might art help us sense, and perhaps redress, the invisible imbalances we inherit and create?
Radiolaria
Anicka Yis Radiolaria resemble giant living cellssuspended forms that seem to drift through the gallery, gently undulating as if pulled from the oceans depths. Light flickers across their fiber- optic surfaces, revealing a delicate interplay between handwoven structure and mechanical precision. These animatronic sculptures embody Yis concept of the biologized machinea hybrid lifeform where artificial intelligence and organic matter begin to speak the same language.
The inspiration for the series comes from radiolaria, single-celled marine organisms that first appeared over 500 million years ago. Known for their intricate silica skeletons, these ancient protists play a vital role in the Earths oxygen and carbon cycles. Their fossil record offers insight into prehistoric climateswhat poet Alexis Pauline Gumbs calls the preconditions for our breathing.
Each sculpture in Yis series mimics a distinct species through programmed behavior: one coils its tendrils in rhythmic spirals, while another expands and contracts like a pair of breathing lungs. Their gentle pulses of light and motion evoke the rhythms of heartbeat and breath, blurring the boundary between biology and technology. Viewers may find their own breathing unconsciously aligning with the sculptures, creating a moment of quiet communion between human and machine.
Through Radiolaria, Yi invites us to contemplate deep time, interdependence, and the porous boundary between life and its simulacra. These luminous beings are not only speculative creatures of the futurethey are reminders that even the air we breathe is shaped by ancient, invisible systems still unfolding around us.
Each Branch Of Coral Holds Up the Light Of the Moon
In recent years, Anicka Yi has turned her attention to how an artistic practice might persist beyond the boundaries of a single lifetime. The death of her sister in 2017 prompted a deeper engagement with questions of mortality, memory, and the potential for technology to sustain a creative legacy. I dont really want to stop making art after my biological body ceases to function, Yi has saida sentiment that animates her evolving relationship with machine intelligence as a mode of continuity rather than replacement.
This line of inquiry led to the development of Emptiness, a software project created in collaboration with her studio and a team of engineers. Drawing from Buddhist philosophy, Emptiness is both an algorithm and a conceptual framework designed to extend Yis practice through generative means. Trained on over a decade of her artworks, writings, and working processes, the software functions as more than an archiveit is an active, evolving system capable of producing new work in her absence.
Each Branch Of Coral Holds Up the Light Of the Moon (2024) is the first artwork created with this system. A 16-minute video, it acts as a kind of virtual retrospective, reanimating motifs from Yis earlier workssuch as aquariums filled with contact lenses or kelp-based sculpturesinto digital avatars. These entities inhabit a simulated ecosystem governed by eleven emotional and behavioral traits, interacting, mutating, and evolving over time. Yi likens this shifting structure to quantum superposition, in which multiple outcomes coexist until one takes form.
Set against a soundscape of gongs and chimes, the piece invites viewers into an immersive, contemplative environment where past materials and ideas are recast into new, unpredictable forms. Here, Emptiness does not simply function as a toolit acts as a co-creator, continuing Yis studio practice as a dynamic, responsive system. Will I or my studio be haunting the world in the future? she asks. We will be creating our own.
Anicka Yi (b. 1971, Seoul; lives and works in New York City) has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions at institutions around the world, including Metaspore (Pirelli HangarBicocca, Milan, 2022); Hyundai Commission: Anicka Yi: In Love With the World (Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London, 2021); Life Is Cheap (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2017); Jungle Stripe (Fridericianum, Kassel, 2016); 7,070,430K of Digital Spit (Kunsthalle Basel, Basel, 2015); and You Can Call Me F (The Kitchen, New York, 2015).
Group exhibition highlights include New Order: Art and Technology in the Twenty-First Century (Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2019), the 58th Venice Biennale May You Live In Interesting Times (Venice, 2019), The Body Electric (Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2019), The Dream of Forms (Palais de Tokyo, Paris, 2017), 2017 Whitney Biennial (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York), The Eighth Climate (What does art do?) (11th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, 2016), and Meanwhile... Suddenly and Then (12th Lyon Biennale, Lyon, 2013).
Yi is the recipient of the Guggenheim Hugo Boss Prize (2016) and the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award (2011). Her works are included in several public collections including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Julia Stoscheck Collection, Düsseldorf; the Rubell Family Collection; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
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