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Error C’est La Vie
FREDERIK DE WILDE, 2026on objkt
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Error C’est La Vie _ The Incredible Sodomy of Marcel DuchAIm by Frederik De Wilde

In the contemporary regime of artificial intelligence, the image can no longer be trusted to function as evidence. Its historical grounding in indexicality — once secured by photography and lens-based capture — has begun to dissolve under the pressures of synthetic production. Images are no longer primarily taken from the world; they are assembled from statistical inference, generated through models trained on the residual archives of human visual culture. What circulates today is not truth, but plausibility: a computationally negotiated likeness of reality.

Within this condition, Error C’est La Vie _ The Incredible Sodomy of Marcel DuchAIm operates as both symptom and critique. Frederik De Wilde situates the work at the unstable intersection of generative systems, machine vision, and computational aesthetics, where perception itself becomes a contested field. The NFT series does not present fixed images in the traditional sense, but rather procedural events — visual outputs produced through autonomous and semi-autonomous systems that continuously mutate form, coherence, and authorship.

Here, prompts, datasets, latent vectors, compression artifacts, algorithmic bias, and autonomous agents are not background infrastructure; they are the medium. The artwork emerges less as an object than as a negotiated outcome between human intention and machinic inference. Authorship is thus displaced: no longer anchored in singular creative agency, but distributed across a choreography of probabilistic operations. The artist assumes the role of system designer or conductor, staging conditions under which images appear, drift, and destabilize themselves.

Crucially, these synthetic images are never solitary inventions. Each output is an aggregation of cultural residue: scraped image banks, invisible labour, encoded assumptions, proprietary architectures, and sedimented aesthetic histories. Machine learning models function as cultural unconsciousness engines — recursively reorganising collective memory into statistically coherent hallucinations. What surfaces in the image is therefore not merely representation, but the sedimentation of desire, exclusion, repetition, and systemic bias embedded in visual culture at scale.

De Wilde’s work also foregrounds a deeper epistemic tension: the increasing displacement of human perception by machine-mediated visibility. As algorithmic systems determine what can be seen, amplified, or rendered legible, visual culture becomes governed by infrastructures that precede interpretation. The synthetic image no longer reflects reality; it competes with it, reorganises it, and in many cases anticipates it.

Against this backdrop, the series does not ask whether images are real or false — a distinction that has become structurally inadequate. Instead, it interrogates the conditions of their emergence: Which systems author visibility? Which forms of power are embedded in synthetic perception? And what remains of authorship when imagination itself is outsourced to computational processes operating at planetary scale?

Positioned between critique and speculative fiction, the work frames synthetic imagery as an epistemological rupture rather than a stylistic evolution. It destabilises inherited binaries — document and fiction, original and copy, observer and machine — replacing them with a continuous field of computational becoming. In this sense, the image no longer refers back to reality as its source.
It refers to the systems through which reality is rendered perceptible at all.