12/11/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/11/2025 16:14
To celebrate over a decade of artistic experimentation with AI, today we are revealing Gradient Canvas, an exhibition of 13 newly commissioned artworks. Inspired by the Bay Area's local ecology, Gradient Canvas explores the idea that artificial intelligence can act as a bridge - connecting human perception, machine vision and the natural world around us.
The featured global artists, a group including long-time collaborators with Google, used Google tools and AI to expand how we sense and interact with our surroundings. Their new works probe the co-evolving relationships between people, nature and machines, offering unique perspectives on how different forms of intelligence make sense of the world.
Hear directly from the multidisciplinary group of artists about what inspired their work and the unique approaches to their work with AI:
Installation view of Pollinator Pathmaker: 6nvKvSPnBEEFa6vTqwXJaZ in 'Human Vision' by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg at Google Gradient Canopy in Mountain View, California, 2025. Photo: Henrik Kam.
In Silico, by Casey Reas Photo: Henrik Kam.
The Recombinant Room, by Certain Measures Photo: Henrik Kam.
A Google Tree, by Clement Vallas Photo: Henrik Kam.
The Garden Eternal: California, by Linda Dounia Photo: Henrik Kam.
EP Flow, by Michael Joo Photo: Henrik Kam.
Somatic Landscapes, by Rashaad Newsome Photo: Henrik Kam.
Machine Dreams: Biophilia, by Refik Anadol Photo: Henrik Kam.
California Terrain, by Sarah Rosalena Photo: Henrik Kam.
Clouds, by Trevor Paglen Photo: Henrik Kam.
DEAR DATA, by Sasha Stiles Photo: Henrik Kam.
Rooted in early and long term efforts like the Google Arts & Culture Artist-in-Residence programs, our commitment to supporting artists has a long history. Ten years ago, Google researcher Alex Mordvintsev developed DeepDream, a computer-vision program that signaled the creative potential of artists and artificial intelligence and sparked a public fascination with AI-generated visuals. This excitement directly paved the way for our groundbreaking 2016 art exhibition with Gray Area and initiatives like Artists + Machine Intelligence (AMI), accelerating partnership between artists and AI that continues today.
Human imagination is what gives technology purpose. We believe that when artists work with powerful tools, they don't just create; they help us all build a more thoughtful future. That's why our focus for the next decade is on expanding this canvas by supporting the next generation of visionary voices and making cutting-edge AI tools more accessible for everyone.
The exhibition includes a physical installation at our Gradient Canopy office in Mountain View, explore the artworks online on Google Arts & Culture.