Digital artist Beeple's "Regular Animals"—a pack of ten AI‑powered robotic dogs wearing the faces of tech billionaires, dead artists and the creator himself—will be on view at Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie from April 29 to May 10. The robots, which sold for $100,000 each during their Art Basel Miami debut, wander the gallery, photograph visitors and eject prints filtered through the visual language of the face they display. The installation is paired with Nam June Paik’s 1994 Andy Warhol Robot, linking two generations of media‑centric art. Curator Lisa Botti frames the show as proof that technology is reshaping culture and can no longer be ignored by museums.
Beeple, born Mike Winkelmann, has become a poster child for the convergence of cryptocurrency, AI and contemporary art. After his $69 million Christie’s sale in 2021, the artist has leveraged viral moments—such as the $100,000‑a‑pop robotic dogs at Art Basel Miami—to cement a market for high‑tech collectibles. "Regular Animals" pushes the concept further by turning the robots into autonomous photographers, turning gallery visitors into both subject and audience while generating on‑demand, AI‑styled prints that echo the personas they mimic.
Placing the installation inside Mies van der Rohe’s Neue Nationalgalerie is a deliberate curatorial move. The stark modernist architecture, with its polished granite floors, provides a stark contrast to the playful, noisy bots, underscoring the tension between classic institutional space and emergent digital media. By juxtaposing Beeple’s dogs with Nam June Paik’s 1994 Andy Warhol Robot, the exhibition draws a lineage from early video‑art experiments to today’s AI‑driven practices, reinforcing the idea that mechanical reproduction and artistic expression have always been intertwined.
The show’s broader implication is a signal to museums worldwide: embracing AI‑enabled artworks is no longer optional but essential for relevance. As visitors experience real‑time, AI‑filtered portraits, they confront the surveillance aesthetics that permeate everyday life. This interactive critique may inspire institutions to program more participatory, technology‑centric exhibitions, while collectors see a validated market for pricey, limited‑edition digital pieces. In a landscape where art, tech, and commerce increasingly overlap, Beeple’s Berlin debut marks a milestone in the institutional acceptance of AI art.
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