Online
Group Show
Daily Program / Season #3
May 26 - Jun 26, 2026
Overview
"It's rare we get to see a live creative push and pull between changes in tools and the possibilities and constraints they offer artists to create art. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for many of the artists willing to experiment."
- Alejandro Cartagena
Details
The Fellowship Daily Program's first year was dedicated to AI video, documenting one of the medium's most rapidly evolving periods. With contributions from artists worldwide, creating unique works, the program stands as a comprehensive exploration of AI video's technical, aesthetic, and conceptual advancements from 2023 to 2026. Artists experimented boldly, from SORA to text-to-story narratives, significantly advancing their individual voices and demonstrating the medium's capabilities as a new tool for art making, storytelling, and visual experimentation.
Looking ahead, the Daily Program Season 3 will focus on a carefully selected group of artists whose exceptional potential we are committed to supporting through dedicated curation, mentorship, and promotion. As AI tools rapidly evolve, these artists are at the forefront, exploring new dimensions within their creative practice. The Daily Program Season 3 provides a platform for artists to share their evolving journeys, breakthroughs, and ongoing dialogues with both their peers and collectors.
Artworks:
Featured
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Anthony Sylvester
Life of Constant
2026
Life of Constant is a stitched hallucination of America , a single, endless shot created from real VHS footage I captured across the United States and fused together through artificial intelligence. The film embraces the imperfections of the analog medium. That aesthetic of fragility is deeply symbolic to me , a reflection of how life and society often feel suspended between collapse and continuity, somehow barely holding together while still moving forward.
The film begins with a car drifting off a cliff, a symbolic surrender to the journey ahead. From there, time collapses. Landscapes melt into one another, memories blur, and geography becomes untethered from chronology. What starts as documentation transforms into something closer to a nostalgic fever dream: a meditation on movement, memory, and the strange emotional residue of the American West.
The project is rooted in the idea of removing time entirely and replacing it with pure spatial experience , gliding endlessly through deserts, mountains, highways, forests, and forgotten places as though consciousness itself is traveling. There’s whimsy in the drift, but also tension beneath it. The final image , a ripped and weathered American flag, a recurring Easter egg in my work , reflects both optimism and unease about the future. It exists as a contradiction: pride and decay, hope and disillusionment, all occupying the same frame.
Anthony Sylvester
Listen to an Audio Reflection from Anthony Sylvester discussing this work.