Calculating Empires

A Genealogy of Technology and Power Since 1500

Calculating Empires is a large-scale research visualization and physical installation exploring how technical and social structures co-evolved over five centuries. It traces technological patterns of colonialism, militarization, automation, and enclosure since 1500 to show how these forces still subjugate and how they might be unwound.

Credits

Calculating Empires: A Genealogy of Technology and Power Since 1500
By Kate Crawford and Vladan Joler (2023)

Acknowledgments

Sarah Ciston - Research and design associate
Francis Corry, Annie Dorsen, Edward Kang, Will Orr, and Hamsini Sridharan - Research advisors
Hannah Franklin and Michael Weinberg - Project management
Olivia Solis Villaverde and Milutin Marinovic - Website production

With thanks to Prof. Mike Ananny, Dr. Pradnya Bivalkar, Chiara Costa, Elliott Crawford, Prof. Dubravko Culibrk, Melodi Dincer, Prof. Bernard Geoghegan, Prof. Mario Hibert, Jake Karr, Prof. Djordje Krivokapic, Dr. Sasha Luccioni, Dr. Ida Momennejad, Prof. John Modern, Trevor Paglen, Laura Poitras, Gordan Savičić, Prof. Justin E. H. Smith, Prof. Felix Stalder, Jer Thorp, and Prof. Fred Turner. We'd also like to acknowledge everyone in the Knowing Machines Project, the Share Foundation, the fellows of the Robert Bosch Academy, Australian National University School of Cybernetics, and the Perast Monastery retreat.

Contact

info.at.calculatingempires.net

Supported by

The Sloan Foundation, as part of the Knowing Machines Project (https://knowingmachines.org)
The Robert Bosch Academy (https://www.robertboschacademy.de/)
Fondazione Prada (https://www.fondazioneprada.org/project/calculating-empires/)

Upcoming Exhibitions

Previous Exhibitions

Technical specification

Calculating Empires is an immersive physical installation that can be staged in different formats. The minimum size of the work is 24 meters in length, and 3 meters in height. It can be staged as a circular work, or as two wall murals facing each other. It can also be installed as a large-scale floor work.

We include two large format handmade books to be shown alongside the work. One is for the themes of Communication and Computation, the other is for Control and Classification. They are printed on semi-transparent paper, so the timelines overlap, and they allow visitors to read the details up close. We stage the books with pencils, to invite audience members to make their own annotations and notes in the books, which we collect at the end of the exhibition as an open form of feedback.

Biographies

Prof. Kate Crawford is a leading scholar of the impacts of artificial intelligence. She is a research professor at USC Annenberg in Los Angeles, a senior principal researcher at MSR New York, and was the inaugural chair of AI and Justice at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris. Her book Atlas of AI won multiple awards, was named a book of the year by Science and the Financial Times, and is translated into 12 languages. She leads the Knowing Machines Project, an international research collaboration studying the foundations of AI. Her artworks and visualizations have been widely exhibited, are in the permanent collections of MoMA, the V&A Museum, Ars Electronica, and the Design Museum, and have been recognized with the Aryton Prize. Kate was named by Time Magazine’s TIME100 as one of the most influential people in AI.

Prof. Vladan Joler is an academic, researcher, and artist whose work blends data investigations, critical cartography, investigative journalism, and data visualization. He is SHARE Foundation co-founder and professor at the New Media Department of the University of Novi Sad. Vladan Joler's work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the V&A Museum, and the Design Museum in London, and also in the permanent exhibition of the Ars Electronica Center. His work has been exhibited in more than a hundred international exhibitions worldwide.

Installation views

Fondazione Prada - Milan | Black version of the map

Exhibition view of “Calculating Empires”
Osservatorio Fondazione Prada, Milan
Photo: Piercarlo Quecchia - DSL Studio / @piercarloquecchia - @dsl__studio
Courtesy: Fondazione Prada

Fondazione Prada - Milan | Objects supporting the exhibition

Exhibition view of “Calculating Empires”
Osservatorio Fondazione Prada, Milan
Photo: Piercarlo Quecchia - DSL Studio / @piercarloquecchia - @dsl__studio
Courtesy: Fondazione Prada

Fondazione Prada - Milan | Books

Exhibition view of “Calculating Empires”
Osservatorio Fondazione Prada, Milan
Photo: Piercarlo Quecchia - DSL Studio / @piercarloquecchia - @dsl__studio
Courtesy: Fondazione Prada

Fondazione Prada - Milan | Kate and Vladan

Exhibition view of “Calculating Empires”
Osservatorio Fondazione Prada, Milan
Photo: Patrick Toomey Neir
Courtesy: Fondazione Prada

KW Institute - Berlin, Germany | Communication and Computation

Exhibition view of “Poetics of Encryption” Installation “Calculating Empires”
KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin
Courtesy: KW Institute for Contemporary Art

KW Institute - Berlin, Germany | Control and Classification

Exhibition view of “Poetics of Encryption” Installation “Calculating Empires”
KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin
Courtesy: KW Institute for Contemporary Art