Hito Steyerl unveils new film installation The Island at Fondazione Prada's Osservatorio
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 4, 2025


Hito Steyerl unveils new film installation The Island at Fondazione Prada's Osservatorio
Exhibition view of “The Island” by Hito Steyerl. Osservatorio Fondazione Prada, Milan. Photo: Andrea Rossetti. Courtesy: Fondazione Prada.



MILAN.- The exhibition “The Island” by artist and lecturer Hito Steyerl opens to the public tomorrow, 4 December 2025. Presented by Fondazione Prada at Osservatorio in Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan until 30 October 2026, “The Island” unveils a new film created by Steyerl, which converges into a video installation and gives rise to a series of objects, structures, and video interviews.

With this site-specific project Hito Steyerl delves into multiple narratives united by the recurring element of flooding, addressing urgent topics such as current authoritarian tendencies fostered by the use of AI, the climate crisis, and political pressures on scientific research. Through the artist’s exhibited works, time and space are reorganized by borrowing the logic of quantum physics and science fiction to explore their aesthetic and visual dimensions.

The practice of Hito Steyerl (b. 1966, Munich, Germany) combines artistic production with theoretical analysis to investigate complex socio-political and cultural issues such as the power of media, the ambivalence of technology and science, and the global circulation of images. Developed from research and interviews, Steyerl’s works are situated at the intersection of documentary film and experimental cinema, often extending these forms into the spatial and digital dimensions.

The original idea for “The Island” comes from an anecdote told some years ago to Hito Steyerl by literary critic and academic Darko Suvin (b. 1930, Zagreb, Croatia), author of the seminal 1979 book Metamorphoses of Science Fiction. During a bomb attack in Zagreb in 1941, Suvin reacted to this terrifying event by projecting himself into the American sci-fi serial film, Flash Gordon’s Trip to Mars (1938), where the comic book hero saved the Earth’s destiny. As explained by Steyerl, “This is when Suvin realized that in any situation other worlds were possible. This was the idea of science fiction, to create parallel worlds even under very adverse circumstances. So, I was super fascinated by that inventiveness that comes up with science fiction studies out of this very urgent situation. Then, later it occurred to me that we could implement this visually through quantum technology, as it deals with sudden jumps in states and the idea that several states can coexist simultaneously.”

In “The Island”, the viewer witnesses continuous leaps between different and alternative spatial and temporal dimensions. In this context, science fiction is considered a factual account of fictions that can estrange us from our usual assumptions about reality and is employed as a tool to combine contradictory or opposite worlds, blending fiction with scientific data.

“The Island” unfolds into four interrelated narratives—“The Artificial Island,” “Lucciole,” “The Birth of Science Fiction,” and “Flash!”—and it is paced by the dimensional leaps peculiar to science fiction and quantum physics: from microorganisms of animals and plants to galaxies, from the Neolithic ruins to imagined futures, from the exhibition to filmic space, from literary and poetic narrative to popular culture, from the kitsch aesthetic of comic books to current AI slop.

On the first floor of the Osservatorio, the themes and narratives of the project develop through a luminous spherical installation featuring a 3D documentary scan of the submerged Neolithic site, together with an installation of four LED screens projecting documentary clips that include interviews with quantum physicist Tommaso Calarco, archaeologist Mate Parica, language historian Sachi Shimomura, the daughter of the Nobel Prize-winning chemist Osamu Shimomura, and author Darko Suvin. Two poems by Suvin, presented within a driftwood installation, and a copy of his book Metamorphoses of Science Fiction, are also exhibited.

The second floor features an environment reminiscent of the movie theater where Suvin saw Flash Gordon’s Trip to Mars in the early 1940s. The classic red armchairs are placed on a platform that refers to the shape of the submerged island. The big screen displays Hito Steyerl’s film, which initiates the entire exhibition project, and entangles the different strands with one another using advanced traditional choir (Klapa) singing from local Klapa Ivo Lozica. The exhibition path concludes with three installations made of driftwood that support a set of hemispheres displaying projections of 3D scans of Neolithic artifacts and photogrammetries of the archaeological site.

“The Island” suggests a time beyond human comprehension, spanning from the Neolithic era to World War II, with time-space jumps to the biographical tales of Shimomura and Suvin. With her film and exhibition project, Hito Steyerl intentionally provokes a productive clash between two different notions of time: the junk time of technology and capitalism that disrupts time with continuous jumps and loops that interrupt and exhaust us, and the deep time—not human time, Neolithic time, underwater time—times that are outside of the human artificially created spectrum.










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December 4, 2025

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