About the Post Colonial Museum Project
All Are Welcome Video Game
All Are Welcome is a nonlinear psychological horror text-based game that explores the horror of the Black and Indigenous experience in the United States while touring a virtual reality art exhibition. Play as a Black climate refuge visiting the museum where visitors become the art. Play for free on itch.io!Features
- Experience seven unique deaths across eight chapters that piece together the full Afrofuturist story.
- Reluctantly face off against AI generated artworks based on real-life public art in Philadelphia, PA.
- Make split-second choices that extend your life or take it.
Aesthetic Indigenous Forms Dataset
The past, present, and future of our city communities in the United States exist within colonization's ongoing violence - a perpetual state of lived aftermath to stolen lands, white supremacy, genocide, slavery, and anthropogenic climate change. Our land and water relations remember how we treat them with sewage, chemicals, and trash, and they influence the artistic expressions and world's of Black Philadelphia writers, philosophers, artists. The Aesthetic Indigenous Forms Dataset includes 29 generative artificial intelligence (Gen AI) images, historical research, and curatorial prose that complicates the stories of climate racism, Indigeneity, and climate change that Philadelphia's public art and environmental histories tell. This data is integrated within the Post Colonial Dreams Museum, one of two distinct, yet interconnected virtual museums in Relational Possibilities: A Remix of Aesthetic Forms Through Indigeneity and Blackness.
Curated by Dana Reijerkerk, B.A., M.I.S.
The Creative CoLab Project: Relational Possibilities, LEADING Fellow 2023-2024.
This work is licensed under: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
This data is available for free to view and download on Zenodo.
Methods and Approach
I used generative AI, video game design, curatorial vignettes, research, and data visualizations to create this project.Sources
This is an artistic data science project grounded in local contexts (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania).I collected my sources, thoughts, and inspiration in a Zotero library as I curated this exhibition. As a decolonial scholar, I prioritize using non-traditional sources (e.g. social media, newspaper articles). From an Indigenous Studies perspective, community data is held within social media and Internet-based sources. This is important because traditional ideas in academia about scholarship limit what is authoritative and "scholarly" to print sources (books, journal articles, research studies).
Data Science Tools
I used free, open source tools to assemble my art exhibition. My "Relational Possibilities" co-curator and I felt it was important that this project could be replicated at scale. I utilized these tools:- Generative AI: ChatGPT, Playground.ai, Craiyon.ai
- Video Game Design: Twine, Canva, freesounds.org, Google Docs
- Publication Tools: Scalar, GitHub, Jupyter Notebooks, itch.io, Zenodo
- Digital museum design: AI, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Canva
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This page references:
- AI ART: Aesthetic Indigenous Forms Generative AI Imagery Dataset © 2023 by Dana Reijerkerk is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
- AI ART: "Listen to the water." © 2023 by Dana Reijerkerk is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
- AI ART: All Are Welcome © 2023 by Dana Reijerkerk is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.