ALEXANDRA GILLIAMS



︎ Writing
  






︎ Curatorial



︎ Photography





ABOUT
    Alexandra Gilliams is a PhD candidate in Art History at Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. She is also a writer and researcher who has assisted in developing cultural projects for galleries, museums, and publications for eight years.

    At the moment, she is exploring contemporary artworks that expose the extractive and exploitative practices associated with the rise of artificial intelligence technologies, as well as its influence in visual culture. She is assisting curators with research for an upcoming exhibition about AI at the Jeu de Paume in Paris. In October, she will begin a dissertation on AI and contemporary art.

   She writes about artists who create critical works across technology, science, and society. Bylines include Spike Art Magazine, Do Not ResearchCLOT, XIBT, Art Observed, and ARTPIL.

   She is a founding member of the AI/Arts Observatory, a research group at the Sorbonne that was created by Antonio Somaini, theorist and professor of film, media, and visual culture.

︎ Email
WRITING———TRANSLATIONS (FR>EN)






Johan Van Mullem,
Vegetal Lyrics I, 2021,
Ink on Canvas, 140 x 110 cm
For Love’s S(n)ake!
English translation of
exhibition catalog

Original texts in French by
Paul Grosjean, Historian
Michel Draguet, Director of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
Sophie Hasaerts, Curator

Retrospective by
Johan Van Mullem

Samples available
upon request
MARCH 2023

Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
Brussels, Belgium





Samuel Fasse & Salomé Chatriot
Am I Still Human?
English translation of exhibition catalog

Original text in French by
Ingrid Luquet-Gad

Works by
Samuel Fasse
and Salomé Chatriot

Read more...
SEPT 2019

AMAC Projects
Paris, France






Justa, 2019, Bois de chêne polychromé, 300 x 170 x 120 cm
© Cedric Le Corf / Loo & Lou Gallery
Translated exhibition texts and artist biographies for the following galleries:

Polka Galerie
Loo & Lou Gallery
Galerie Maria Wettergren

Samples available
upon request