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FEMGEN

Oct 20, 2024 - Oct 26, 2025

Overview

Challenging traditional ideals of beauty and femininity, FEMGEN examines how identity is coded, manufactured, and performed in a posthuman era.

- FEMGEN

Now in its fourth edition, FEMGEN Paris brings together female-identifying and non-binary artists shaping the future of generative art. Curated by Micol Apruzzese and Alex Estorick since 2022, the exhibition pairs four emerging artists with pioneers from the Le Random collection, fostering intergenerational dialogue through code and curated conversation.
Through its physical installation at Artverse in Paris and online at Fellowship, FEMGEN traces new genealogies of media, challenging universal ideals of beauty and femininity that encode Western image culture. Set alongside an array of historic works by Nancy Burson, Analivia Cordeiro, Copper Giloth, and Vera Molnar, new series by contemporary artists Gretchen Andrew, Hermine Bourdin, Saeko Ehara, and Jake Elwes explore the ways identity is manufactured and performed in a posthuman age.

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Jake Elwes

DoomScroll #4

2025

Provenance

Contract Address
Blockchain
Ethereum
Token Standard
ERC-721

Details

Artwork ID
14
These images are a visual representation of ‘doom-scrolling’, of what happens when wasted time is turned into a physical scroll of time.
‘DoomScroll’ was created using a process called slit-scan, a photographic method for visualising the passing of time across an image. Historically the film strip would be pulled through a special camera which instead of exposing a full image only exposes a thin slit of light. The film is then fed smoothly through the camera exposing the film to whatever action happens through that slit. One example it was historically used for was to capture horses passing a finishing line and to determine the winner. For this work I've written code to extract rows of pixels from video footage to modernise this method of recording time across a photograph.
To create the work I performed an endurance challenge. I filmed myself doom-scrolling for 3 hours straight until my phone ran out of charge. Images and faces no longer meant anything and as my back started to ache I began seeing only shapeless forms and colours. These recordings are then turned into long photographic scrolls displaying the passage of time. The resulting series of scrolls visualise small chunks of time from this larger performance.
Queer time and the fuzzy representations of time play a key part in the work. Whether that be the rendering of time through slit scan, the strange sense of losing time when enacting the doomscrolling performance or the 7 months it took to render the video on my outdated GPU computer.
The resulting abstracted, generative drawings with light convert time wasted on Instagram into something approaching the sublime. The appropriated data passing across the screen are social media posts which people have chosen to publicly share. Early utopian computer artists used code to make drawing machines. ‘DoomScroll’ advances this process with results mediated through an increasingly corrosive engagement with social media and my iPhone.

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