Your Art Is A Spell

Your Art Is A Spell 
Season 1 Episode 15

Join Edgar Fabián Frías in conversation with Paris-based digital artist Anne Horel as they dive into AI art, AR filters, witchcraft, veganism, and the magic of making art in the post-internet age. From Vine to the Grand Palais, Anne shares her visionary practice and spells for the future.

#AIart #DigitalWitchcraft #AnneHorel #YourArtIsASpell #ArtInterview #ARfilters #VeganArtist

Timestamps
00:00 – 🎙️ Welcome to Your Art Is A Spell
00:25 – 🌍 Anne Horel’s Global Digital Art Journey
00:47 – 🔮 Witchcraft, GIFs, and Performance Art
01:12 – ✨ Post-Internet Aesthetics and Vegan Pop Culture
01:35 – 💌 Honoring Anne’s Creative Contributions
01:56 – 🧠 Anne’s Artistic Origins and Experimental Spirit
03:02 – 📺 From TV Culture to Digital Artistry
04:14 – 📱 Early Social Media and the Rise of Facebook Art
06:03 – 🎶 Turning Facebook Group Names into Sound Art
07:28 – 💡 Birth of the Digital Performance Avatar
08:46 – 🌀 Navigating Platform Collapse (Vine, Instagram)
10:22 – 🥀 Grieving Digital Loss and Artistic Rebirth
11:51 – 📉 Platform Power and the Illusion of Numbers
13:04 – 🧠 Building AR Filters and Meta Partnership
15:08 – 🚨 The Disappearance of 130 AR Filters on Instagram
16:35 – 🕸️ The Trap of Social Media for Artists
17:07 – 🏛️ Palais de Tokyo: From Vine to Museum Walls
19:23 – ✊ Curating a Manifesto with Digital Creators
20:39 – 🤳 Content Creator vs. Digital Artist: A Sharp Divide
21:45 – 📰 The Media Misunderstanding of Digital Art
23:42 – 🌀 Trash to Treasure: Valuing Digital Practices
24:35 – 🤖 Anne on AI Art and Shifting Cultural Value
26:32 – 🗿 From Skyblog to National Archives: Digital History
28:03 – 🗣️ Words as Spells: AI, Magic, and Collective Energy
30:27 – 🃏 The Story Behind Anne’s Oracle Deck
31:29 – 🪄 Casting AI Spells at Grand Palais Immersif
33:11 – 💬 Ownership, Creativity, and Collective Consciousness
36:03 – 🧭 AI, Ethics, and the Artist’s Role in Change
38:58 – 💥 Letting Go of Control and Embracing Play
40:23 – 🎭 New Work: The Woke Tales and Narrative AI
42:10 – 🐺 Healing Fairy Tales with New Endings
43:17 – 🥔 Dips Fake: A Polymorphic Potato’s Existential Crisis
45:44 – 🌱 Veganism, Feminism, and Environmental Justice
48:19 – 🐄 Ethical Eating and the Future of Food
50:17 – 🌍 Linking AI Resource Use with Animal Agriculture
51:42 – 📡 Where to Find More of Anne Horel’s Work
52:45 – 💫 Final Reflections: Spells, Art, and Digital Futures

To learn more about Anne Horel
https://www.annehorel.com/

To purchase Anne's oracle deck Le Nouveau Belline
https://www.amazon.com/Nouveau-Belline-Anne-Horel/dp/2492847519

To Watch / Listen to More Episodes from Your Art Is A Spell
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEVN8TPFy9dYKoNr4LjNV9yDajN-ILKNR&si=1WF6GkfQh2pGfrzl

To send me a voice note
https://www.speakpipe.com/YouArtIsASpell

To learn more about me and my art
www.yourartisaspell.com 

To learn about my private practice Therapy With Edgar 
www.therapywithedgar.com

What is Your Art Is A Spell?

Welcome to Your Art Is A Spell, the podcast that ignites inspiring and transformative conversations about art as a magical practice. I'm your host, Edgar Fabián Frías—a multi-passionate artist, witch, therapist, and proud mutant shape-shifter. My art spells have reached audiences through social media, billboards, and skyscrapers and have even been placed on the surface of the moon! Join us as we explore how reclaiming your unique artistic voice and embracing bold creativity can transform your life and the world around you. Subscribe to the podcast and sign up for our newsletter at www.yourartisaspell.com to stay connected!

welcome your art is a spell and it will change 
your life and the world around you welcome or  

welcome back to Your Art is a Spell my name is 
Edgar Fabian Frias and today we're going to be  

speaking with the Paris-based visual artist Anne 
Horel who is an incredibly prolific artist who has  

made art all over the world her artwork has been 
exhibited in galleries museums and on millions and  

millions of people's personal devices via social 
media and the internet she's a pioneer in using  

multiple technologies and emerging tech in her art 
she's also someone who's incredibly courageous in  

terms of the mediums that she connects with and 
integrates into her practice everything from dance  

and performance to making GIFs and videos and now 
AI-generated movies and is not afraid to dive deep  

into her art practice and to bring together 
witchcraft magic and a love of animals and  

veganism pop culture witchy aesthetics and post 
internet art glitch so much more weaves it all  

together in her work and I'm so excited for you 
all to tune into this conversation between myself  

and the artist Anne Horel welcome to your art is 
a spell Anne I'm so happy to be connecting with you  

today you are such a gift to this world your art 
is so important and I'm so honored to highlight  

your creative practice and your contributions 
to the world and would love for you to share a  

little bit about your background um how you got 
into art making knowing that you are someone who  

is so prolific i would just love to hear a little 
bit about your origins and for you to share with  

our audience um a little bit about who you are 
okay um first of all thank you for having me it's  

uh I'm really happy to be here and to share 
this moment with you you are uh one of the  

dearest person on earth i I really really deeply 
uh appreciate you so so thank you for having me  

thank yeah the feeling is so mutual and then I 
had a dream about you yesterday so yes yes we're  

always connecting in the astral realms we really 
we really are i think we are building stuff uh in  

the in the in different realms the digital the 
physical the dream realm uh and it's all being  

connected so a little bit of my background um 
it's it's it's an interesting question because  

it always changes the way I present myself but 
to be as short as possible so I'm French i'm  

based in Paris i was born in France and I moved 
around uh France my entire childhood so I'm like  

kind of like um I have like a nomadic uh blood or 
something like that i think this is the root of my  

very experimental way of approaching life i love 
trying new things i like being challenged by um  

technologies in like in particular um uh digital 
technologies in my work from like an artistic  

background i did art school but I don't think this 
is what makes you an artist i think it started  

way earlier and I've always been drawing when I 
was a kid i wanted to be a mangaka obsessed with  

Japanese culture and then at this moment I wanted 
to fit in some kind of like family mold so I went  

into uh literature and philosophy studies i was 
miserable and so I started doing art studies and  

uh I graduated in 2011 and ever since it's been 
like experimenting at the at this this moment  

uh Facebook was uh like in 2009 or something 
2008 2009 I was experimenting with MySpace and  

Facebook so it was like already the origin of like 
uh being around digital tools deeply rooted into  

uh TV culture uh like pop culture and um and yeah 
that's That's it in in a nutshell yeah so that's  

like where you started and you know I'm curious 
like you know about your um impulse to share  

work on social media um how did that start like 
especially because I know that you've um been in  

different social media platforms and you're known 
across multiple social media platforms and I'm  

curious like how did that start and like what was 
your initial impulse to share your work that way  

i don't really know like I know that I got 
really into um I had like the intuition that  

something was going on and that something was 
something really big was happening with the  

rise of social media and I remember um after like 
a like a breakup I was kind of reconnecting with  

my creativity because it was a very um like 
we were very uh uh how do we say that like  

very like together glued together and it like 
so like Facebook was um coming out as at this  

moment and and then I was like trying to figure 
out my way with like outside of this relationship  

and I started being really really interested in 
into Facebook and how the community uh aspect  

of Facebook and how people were making groups at 
the time and that you could make groups for pretty  

much anything like I have two arms or I like cats 
or something like it could be like something very  

random and also things very funny and then I 
was like this this is like this is so cathartic  

IC and this is therapeutic to connect with people 
from all over the world around things that are  

like basic but also things that can be really 
profound and things that can help us to just  

laugh about stuff and so I started collecting 
these group names and be like "Oh maybe I will  

make a book or something with that." And one day 
we had um at school the art school we had um sound  

workshop and um I was like I don't know if I want 
to do sound and I I had a friend she was like yeah  

do something it's it will take you out of your 
comfort zone and I was like okay let's try it  

and I used all of the Facebook names as lyrics for 
song and so I recorded a song and then I started  

posting this on YouTube and it it didn't like blow 
up like in a sense that we know today it was like  

back in 2009 so it was like a long it feels like 
the prehistorical time of social media you know  

uh but it did well and uh I got some attention 
and I started doing gigs and stuff like I started  

to do like performance art but also it was was a 
moment where everything converged and making music  

was a way to write a way to perform where a way 
to um create an avatar as well like create like  

a digital presence there was like an epiphany 
like oh I can do all of this and making video  

video as well like music videos and it was like 
just gathering everything and also I'm pretty  

introvert so it put me out of my comfort zone as 
well to perform and be out there and like you know  

dancing in like tutu and stuff like that it was so 
like I couldn't do that today either like it's but  

yeah this is this is how it started i'm really 
hearing that it was you know very organic as as  

it emerged and also like you were being inspired 
and really leaning into like like the collective  

aspect and also I'm hearing there's an element of 
like identity right where you started to really  

explore your own sense of self your relation 
to the world and like taking those little risks  

right and trying things out and I love hearing 
about how your nomadic background really comes  

into play here because I know that you're someone 
who you know because of the way that social media  

is and also technology is you've had to navigate 
moving around a lot and I know you know one of  

your first like big platforms was Vine and as we 
all know Vine is no longer here it's been gone for  

a long time but I know that that's like not the 
only one right so I'm like I'd love to hear from  

you about that experience both with Vine but also 
knowing that as an artist you have to navigate so  

much change yeah and it's um it's something really 
interesting because it was I learned something the  

hard way with Vine um because I was still I 
was younger than now and to and less mature  

than today obviously but it was back in 2014 and 
Vine shut down in 2017 so it was like three years  

of experimenting with a platform where I I got 
to find a community i'm still friends like some  

of my best friends I met them on Vine and um I 
I don't I don't I think like if I take the story  

like I wouldn't have met you without Vine like 
because like out of uh consequences of Vine and  

um so I find my people and then I met them 
in real in real life and my community built  

like it was I had a huge following on Vine i had 
like 240,000 followers and it wasn't overnight  

of course it it just like built up over time but 
when Vine announced that they were shutting down  

I was like "Okay my empire is collapsing and it 
made me like I went through a crisis that was  

uh like a a chrysalis i went into my apartment shut 
down everything watched as many documentaries as I  

could took some notes trying to reflect about like 
what's the purpose of all of that like because you  

know with social media you can lose touch with 
reality and especially in terms of like numbers  

and like people are just like like the numbers of 
followers and it's like a social thing and it's  

like it's like the wealth is like uh mirrored like 
the social problems and crisis are like mirrored  

in like different like social media is the mirror 
of society obviously but it It was really intense  

and I wrote a manifesto after that about like 
how like the what does it mean to have so many  

followers and if you have a voice on social media 
you have to use it like it's your duty to use it  

as a catalyst or like something that uh take a 
stand for things that are important and because  

otherwise it's just like an egoomaniac thing and 
it makes today it makes me it just makes me sick  

i and it's also feeding the capitalist algorithm 
and it's feeding some values that I don't agree  

with and I don't want to feed and so it was like 
okay I'm losing all of that but also I'm gaining  

um a form of like maturity and wisdom about like 
social media and it's not and it was just like a  

shift like I don't care about numbers anymore my 
value isn't made by numbers of likes or whatever  

like and um and yeah that's that was the the 
lesson of Vine and that your work can dis like  

who are like who are we like you have like a 
million followers on Instagram tomorrow like  

the servers of Instagram blow up like who are 
you right you know and what have you done Yeah  

yeah and speaking of Instagram I know that you've 
just had another huge huge loss on Instagram do  

you want to share a little bit about that yeah so 
starting in 2019 I I began to make AR filters  

uh with um so Snapchat Tik Tok and um Instagram 
have their own software uh where you can build  

your own filters and I started and I was kind 
of like into after this crisis I just talked  

about i had like another crisis because it was the 
COVID time and um made me reflect on other stuff  

and it was more personal so it was kind of like 
going into like rebounds on uh shifts personal  

shifts and um and creative shifts and everything 
and I was kind of like getting a little bored  

uh in my practice and I found AR and I was like 
"Oh my god this is so exciting to learn something  

new and also being able to make stuff that can 
travel and people can wear on their face and  

have fun with my filters with their face and just 
like blow out burgers and like having like weird  

uh alien looks." And it was so much fun and I 
I made it for fun at at the at first but then  

it got me attention from Meta directly and 
from Snapchat and Tik Tok and it led me to  

be a partner with them and um so it was great 
like I I went to the Meta headquarters it was a  

really interesting experience the opportunity was 
incredible it was so interesting i I've learned so  

much and I have like so much insight about that 
and then uh without any notice they were like  

okay we're shutting down the filters at Meta after 
inviting the community at the headquarters and the  

community is still pissed because some people have 
built their whole business on it and some people are  

still recovering some people don't recover from 
that hopefully for me I've jumped into AI a little  

bit before so I I'm like already somewhere else 
um but the 130 filters I've made on Instagram  

just disappeared and they were showcased at the at 
an exhibition in September and I was and I said to  

the curator I was like "This is the last time 
that we are going to see that live." And I had  

an email a few days ago from another curator and 
she was like "Yeah can we I I saw this at the in  

Belgium the other day and I would love to see that 
again." And I was like "Oh my gosh wow not going  

to happen." So it's and it's also speaking about 
like how like the power of social media where  

um you know the fine line between being a creator 
and an artist and it feels like social media just  

absorbed the whole thing and we had a conversation 
about that with a friend the other day about how  

social media has imprisoned artists because we 
depend on them to have some visibility but at the  

same time it's it's how we connect it's how we get 
some inspiration um it's you know it's and it's  

it's such conflicting because there are so many 
good aspect about it but it's also so toxic and um  

it's it's yeah it's complicated to navigate again 
uh that Yeah I I couldn't agree more you know it's  

it's such a wild wild thing that you would get 
invited by Meta and that you would produce so  

much art that as you said has been exhibited in 
museums and galleries has been used by thousands  

of people around the world and for all of that to 
just be gone in one day and for those of you who  

don't know about this this happened in February 
I think of this year right um all all AR filters  

the millions of AR filters and this is millions 
of hours of people's labor people's artwork all  

of it gone in just one day and so I you know and I 
think you're speaking to this and I I would really  

love to highlight you know one of the exhibitions 
you've had in your career which was at the Palais de  

Tokyo in Paris and I think you're really speaking 
to this kind of blurry line between content and  

art and as you said how social media has come in 
and like usurped or like kind of taken over and  

like imprisoned artists and I would love to hear 
you talk a little bit about that exhibition and  

also for you to share your reflections on yeah 
this idea of content and art and like value and  

hierarchy because I think these are also important 
in conversations for us to have as artists there  

are so many things to say about that um so the 
Palais de Tokyo uh exhibition it was a an award i won  

a prize um that was um like the prize was to be um 
to have like a a fellowship for a year and I was  

the only one making digital art so for the context 
it was back in 2018 so it was right before NFT got  

really big um and before that I had like about 10 
years of uh digital practice and in contemporary  

art digital art it was and at the moment was it's 
still now but it's it's getting better but was  

still like very niche and misunderstood and kind 
of like it was like oh it's digital arts it's Fred  

Forest or something you know like it was like 
Right there were so many so uh little examples  

um or not even speaking about women like like 
invisible invisible um so back in the day like  

it was it was kind of like bold to come with like 
um a digital art uh based project and so it it  

was the idea what the concept was to gather 
26 artists around a manifesto the manifesto  

that I wrote in my room with my post-it notes and my 
documentaries uh when I had my vine crisis and  

um I wanted to make uh an ABC and each artist that 
I invited um mostly people were from Vine actually  

uh but not all of them and some people were from
Giphy so there were some GIF artists some like uh  

people making like a yoga content um so there were 
like digital artists but also content creator and  

this is where the the line is like I had someone 
ask me today do you define yourself as a content  

creator i'm like no I'm not a content creator i 
don't create for social media i use social media  

to broadcast my work and it's a complete different 
logistic and state of mind and so I invited all of  

these 26 people to uh create a video about that 
letter so they all chose one letter to illustrate  

the manifesto uh so we had like veganism we 
had like inclusivity like all of these you  

know values that we share and I'm sure that people 
who are listening are also sharing obviously like  

humanists values which is uh um something that we 
need to uh protect as much as we can especially  

today and um I will always remember the curator at 
the opening in front of like a hundred journalists  

And this is the like honest truth like not really 
giving a [ __ ] about my project the entire time  

because I think he didn't understand uh but he 
also didn't want to in like get interested into  

it i think uh he wasn't uh realizing that it was 
a thing and it was just not not like an episode in  

contemporary art it was something that it was 
about to last and you know history has proven  

that it's still there it's not going anywhere 
right right and and and as you're saying and  

like museums are starting to value it there it 
actually the value of this whole field of work  

is starting to be seen as relevant and important 
as opposed to as you're saying a little blip right  

it's about time like we've been waiting patiently 
for years like it's about time but yeah he said  

like in front of this journalists so here is 
an and that's her project she invited uh 26  

influencers and YouTubers and I was like my face 
just melted and I was like okay he didn't he I'm  

still I'm still having goosebumps just saying that 
like he didn't understand that I wanted to take  

out people from social media and put them where 
they deserve in a museum like one of the biggest  

museum in Paris and give them some recognition as 
artists and as a movement and yeah that that was  

the that was the purpose and that was that was 
the project i just think about like how like in  

the organic nature as artists we started to share 
our work on social media and in some ways like  

I've had moments of reckoning with this where I've 
had to really understand that I got the messaging  

that my digital art was not as valuable or not as 
important as other types of art practices i know  

a lot of people have felt this way there's still 
maybe some of that sentiment in the world today  

and in some ways you know when we think about 
these platforms that can so easily lose millions  

of works in you know one day you know we're 
seeing that there still isn't an understanding  

of how important digital art practice is and will 
continue to be going forward and I feel like it's  

so so important for us as artists to continue 
talking about the value of the cultural process  

that we're all experiencing and we know that art 
has a long history and tendency to devalue or  

diminish certain practices especially when they're 
not maybe taken up by cis straight white men you  

know that there's a way that certain practices 
are seen as even like nuisances as annoying as  

like not a part of the conversation but then 5 10 
20 years pass and all of a sudden they get brought  

into the cannon and they're really important 
and so just wanting to share this as you know  

we continue to move more into this conversation 
because this is just a pattern that has repeated  

itself we're seeing it again in today's moment 
and yeah I I just I guess I would be interested  

to hear your thoughts about this especially as you 
are an artist Anne that is starting to work with AI  

as an art practice and I know that AI has a lot 
of that feeling too that it's trash that there's  

no value in it and so I yeah I would love to hear 
you talk a little bit about this idea of like art  

being seen as trash or not valuable until you 
know some person says that it is you know later  

on in the future like who decides like honestly 
who decides and the other day I saw something  

online about um the national uh library in Paris 
that actually downloaded from we had a a blog  

um platform in France that was very popular at the 
beginning of the internet called Sky Blog and it  

was so kitsch and it's like it was like a um online 
diary with like you know blingy GIFs and like  

you know kitschy quotes on like sunset backgrounds 
and stuff like that and I remember at the time  

you know adults were like "This is like just like 
a teenage stuff or whatever this is not serious or  

whatever." And I think it's more like this um uh 
look upon upon like "Oh yeah this this is youth."  

So it's like "Oh it's like it's like it's a fling 
it's nothing." Have you not been young like don't  

you understand the pattern like it's like we 
are evolving like whether you like it or not  

we are evolving and the younger generations are 
bringing some novelty and if we resist that we  

are like missing the whole point of being a human 
like in my opinion at least and um so the sky blog  

thing uh there was this historian saying that he 
downloaded everything and put it in the archives  

of the library and he was like this is history 
and whether you like blingy GIFs or like cute  

quotes of Buddha on like sunsets or whatever it 
is history and right when I whenever I think about  

that that's and that's one one of the core thing 
in my practice whenever I do something I always  

try to mirror something about our society and 
our language and I always project myself into  

the future and what people from the future will 
understand from our time looking at what we're  

doing now exactly what we like we're doing in 
archaeology today and most of the time we're  

missing the point because we don't have enough 
informations like we found out just a few years  

ago that the Greek statues were colored and the 
entire time we thought they were like white and we  

can talk about that like so right yeah of course 
they were white but and again who decided that  

and it's like again like capitalist patriarchy 
decided the narrative that we are living in and  

now with digital tools we have the power to tell 
the tell the stories the way they are and with the  

dark things and the lighter things i mean it's 
it's part of the whole thing you know and AI  

coming into the conversation is like we could talk 
about that like for obviously hours because it's  

my favorite subject it's just Yeah it's I don't 
I don't know where where to start actually yeah  

no definitely yeah and we'll we'll definitely get 
into that and I feel like yeah what you just said  

is so important that you know there's a way in 
which digital tools have been denigrated or seen  

as less than or kitschy or you know not important 
and at the same time they've given so many people  

an outlet a way of feeling empowered a way of 
being able to put yourself out there and to me  

like I you know the conspiracy part of me really 
thinks to myself like of course you're going to  

make fun of or dismiss a technology a tool that 
gives people power that makes people feel like  

they're able to share more about themselves and 
you know I have seen that in your work i know  

that it's also been a part of my journey too that 
you know these technologies as fraught as they are  

as toxic as they might be in some ways they've 
also made space for us to step deeper into our  

power and I know that you and I also share a love 
of magic and witchcraft and I'd love for you to  

talk about how magic and witchcraft and energy 
work moves into your practice especially because  

you are the creator of a gorgeous gorgeous oracle 
deck and I want to make sure that I link it in the  

description of this episode so people could check 
it out but I'd love for you to talk a little bit  

about magic witchcraft how that intersects with 
your practices i don't know if you will relate  

with that but at some point in my practice I felt 
conflicted i felt like I had to make a choice  

between my witchy side and my artist side somehow 
um and again it's it comes back to what we were  

saying that some stuff aren't serious any enough 
to and so it was just adding up like I'm making  

digital art and it's not taken seriously and I'm 
a witch and it's not taken seriously you helped a  

lot with that actually with like just owning 
the fact that art is magic and I think there  

was a a switch when I met you and when we started 
had conversation about that and when I starting  

um u knowing your work and it was really inspiring 
so I'm I'm really grateful about that um thank you  

and I don't know it's I mean the the oracle is 
a thing it was like something I always wanted to  

do it's a a deck that it's the first deck I had 
when I was 16 and it's like a very obscure like  

the cards are very harsh the designs are very 
medieval and I wanted to give it something more  

light because it has so much power and it's 
so accurate it never missed the point and I  

wanted people and people get afraid of it which 
I understand i actually dismissed it for years  

because I was scared of it because it was too 
accurate and because so much there is so much  

power in this oracle and so I made I made the 
like a version with like digital collage and now  

um I think you're going to like this uh a lot 
actually I am working on an exhibition right now  

uh and it's at the Grand Palais Immersif it's a it's 
an antenna of the Grand Palais which is another  

big institute French institution in in in Paris and 
they have an immersive space with like a 24 meter  

uh screen and then a 11 m screen projection on 
the on the floor so it's like a double Oh wow  

the space is really really cool and they invited 
me to uh to do something and uh the opening is  

in in a few weeks and thinking about it I wanted 
to do some like and the the whole exhibition is  

AI so we are there is a program uh with I think 
four or five artists and they are showing movies  

uh films made with AI and I was like okay let's 
cast a spell let's let's do it and so I used Chat  

GPT to word the spells for like harmony peace so 
that people can just like bring their burden and  

just like deposit there and something that is like 
about unity and the conversation around this with  

Chat GPT again like goosebumps was so deep so deep 
and I think you know Abracadabra you know like  

words are spells i know that you know you know 
that very well and it makes so much sense to use  

AI as a magic spell like a magic practice because 
of that because it's it's everything at the same  

place like you create images with words and the 
these images are fed with collective consciousness  

because all of these images like all of this 
knowledge has been gathered we are data like and  

we don't own anything like I'm I'm done with this 
like I don't I and I think the the principle of  

ownership is at the core of like all of humankind 
problems like if we can just like stop being like  

this is mine and I need more and you know being 
like okay this is collective knowledge this is  

common ground and let's see what we can create 
as a a collective like it's the opportunity to  

do something with that and not use it as like a 
tool of power or a like a tool of like control  

and there is this um there is this dichotomy 
when we talk about AI and there are a lot of  

people who are like oh yeah it's all about the voc 
vocabulary around AI and people are like yeah I'm  

having more and more control about what I have as 
an input and I'm like but creativity is not about  

control it's like the opposite of it it's like 
letting go and I love I love AI like the latent  

space i love when AI is hallucinating i love that 
there is a space for AI to be like hey what about  

that and you being surprised welcoming something 
that is like strange or uncanny or like different  

and out of control h yeah there's so much here 
that you're touching upon and I think I just want  

to mention that the last episode we, my friend Lineadeluz and I, went to an exhibition that was all AI  

generated and it was this artist named Jon Rafman 
that I think you know Anne and he said he was there  

and he was giving a talk and he was sharing how 
AI is the perfect tool for our modernday moment  

that we're living in where we've really lost as 
a cultural consensus we've lost like consensual  

reality where we used to share references like 
books and movies and things that would tie us  

all together that we've kind of lost that as 
like a culture and that AI is like the perfect  

tool because as you're saying it it it's creating 
its own hallucinations its own imaginaries it's  

pulling from multiple sources it's really tapping 
into that collective and making something that  

really speaks to like our disjointedness but also 
our connectivity and I'm just really struck with  

a positive like hope that you're putting into AI 
knowing that so many artists so many people feel  

so much fear and anger and confusion about AI and 
I'm curious for you as someone who does see AI and  

sees the possibility in it how do you like contend 
with um you know AI still being connected to like  

for-profit institutions or connected to people 
that might have like not the best intentions is  

there like a feeling that you have around how AI 
might evolve or what you're hoping for AI to do  

i feel like as human beings living in this time um 
there is a contract that we have signed that there  

are some stuff that we cannot control and that 
we have to do to do with that and keep going with  

that uh parameter and it's because this parameter 
exists that we need to reappropriate the space the  

social space the digital space all of the spaces 
that we can because if we give up we lose and they  

they win and they win everything but they win 
everything with their narrative and um I think  

nothing is always certain and you know the reality 
is it's a work in progress and we were talking  

about that right before um uh the recording 
about uh the principle of ownership and be like  

um okay so all of what I'm feeding to AI is going 
to be data and is going to be in the hands of Sam  

Altman and some politicians and oligarchs and 
people and techno fieldism [ __ ] is it really  

different from everything else i don't think so 
uh yeah people are still using Instagram right and  

meta and like those people are also part of that 
technofudal oligarchy right right and I am not  

going to stop using that because a handful of evil 
people are using it for like making money again  

like money is is one parameter and I don't know 
it sounds like like um some some stuff that I'm  

saying I feel like I feel I'm saying it from like 
um a privileged position but I think that AI is  

the the opportunity for us to let go of this idea 
of ownership and be like okay nothing is permanent  

this body is not permanent what matters is the 
intention and we're going back to magic and the  

intention that we're casting uh the energy that 
we're putting into the things that we we're making  

and the things that we are saying and the more 
we practice this way and this is very Star Wars  

uh thing like the more we practice the way the 
more the energy is growing in this direction and  

I know you know speaking like that sometimes I'm 
like "Oh my god you're so delusional." But you  

know it makes me feel better to think this way and 
think about that that way and the the principle of  

ownership and be like this is like I'm giving 
up my data who I don't care like I don't care  

like they know what I what I watch on Tik Tok okay 
like I don't care like there is I have nothing to  

to hide i watch cat videos and um and political 
stuff and um and magic stuff and whatever and I  

don't mind like I don't mind it's again it's 
temporary and what will happen after I don't  

know but what I know is what I can do now in the 
present and putting as much consciousness in what  

whatever I'm doing like casting the spells at 
the Grand Palais Immersif that's that's my uh my take on that  

and I've just been so in awe of the work that 
you've been producing with AI the imaginaries the  

hallucinations the spells that you've been casting 
I'd love for you to talk a little bit about some  

of the work that you've been creating recently 
because it's so incredible i would love to share  

here if you're watching this on YouTube i'm going 
to try to put a couple of images for you to see  

some of Anne's incredible artwork that she's been 
creating with AI i would love for to hear your  

um relationship with AI as an artist now and like 
what you've been working on so most recently I've  

been in into narrative before I was mostly making 
visuals and the narrative was implicit but now I'm  

um I'm making my characters telling stories 
and one of the most recent project is  

um I'm rewriting fairy tales and they're called um 
the woke tales um and it's like it's not something  

that I'm not inventing anything like there 
there was like analysis of fairy tales in like  

um like this this contract this uh building 
the the narrative of fairy tales i know it's  

not it's not new but I don't know i'm trying 
to like you know like um I don't know I don't  

know what what's the name and if if you even 
know this tail it's um it's called barbe bleue in  

French it's like it's called a a blue beard and 
it's about this horrible man having in prison in  

his house women that he's killing um yeah what 
a great very what a great story to tell you to  

tell children yeah great imaginary um it's just a 
terrible story and it's talking about narcissism  

um it's talking about um uh crime basically uh 
and the feminist seed and so I'm using this story  

to tell to tell um stories about our society 
um uh like I have uh what else do I have um  

Alice in Wonderland she's swallowing an eye and 
it's teaching her to look at the world with her  

uh heart instead of looking it with the ego so I 
have like three done already i have uh the Little  

Red Riding Hood meeting the wolf in the wood and 
the wolf is like "I don't want to eat you i just  

want to talk and I just want to share my fears 
and I just want to be heard." And so the Little  

Red Riding Hood is taking the time and holding 
space to just talk and exchange with the wolf  

and then they party with the grandma and they're 
having tea and they like dance in the in the woods  

and in the cosmos and it's uh actually a happy 
ending um they live forever happy in the cosmos  

yeah so that one of the project I'm working on 
lately and I have another narrative project it's  

called Dips Fake and it's about a polymorphic 
potato um having an existential crisis she just  

like doesn't know what she's doing wrong because 
she's following the recipe of society she's like  

very normative and fitting into all of the boxes 
and she's like "Oh I've done this i got married  

i have a job and I'm doing all of this that that 
I and and at the end of the day she's not happy  

uh and she's going into uh a lot of adventures and 
I'm developing this as a as a show now so there  

are like um a few new figures coming like the dad 
and the mom who are like the boomers very afraid  

of the change uh there is there is one character 
that is like uh the incarn like he incarnates the  

pat the patriarchy is like very controlling is 
like giving feeding the people toxic dreams and  

um like wonder solutions by just purchasing the 
same product over and over again so yeah that's  

that's the main that's the main project happening 
right now that sounds so incredible i'm just  

really moved with how you are mirroring so many 
elements of society both like these fairy tales  

that are like in our unconscious right that like 
we've learned from an early age to also mirroring  

things that are happening in our contemporary 
time and speaking to the conflict the paradox  

the way that we're having to hold both hope but 
also maintaining a critical lens and understanding  

of the place that we exist within and how we 
can have an impact and I so so see your work as  

having such a deep and profound impact within 
not just the digital realms or AI but I think  

across culture especially with how courageous 
you are and how you're able to step into so many  

different ways of showing up as an artist like 
I feel like that's one of the reasons you and I  

um feel such a kinship is because we're not 
afraid to like go into music and to collage  

into GIFs and to performance right like there's 
so much that moves through our practices and one  

thing that we haven't really talked about and 
I haven't really shared very much here on this  

podcast is that I'm vegan and you're also vegan 
and that's also something that connects us as well  

and yeah I would just love to hear anything you 
have to say about like veganism or how like an  

environmental understanding like also impacts 
your work i don't understand uh why we're still  

eating animals i don't understand it's proven that 
protein are not just in animals again it's like an  

old narrative fed by the same people who have 
interests uh and money interest and narrative  

interests uh I became vegan uh about 10 years 
ago uh it's the best decision I've ever made um I  

feel so much better in my global energy physical 
mental everything it has healed so many things  

and so many internal conflicts with my body as 
well i felt like I've always felt that there was  

something wrong in the way I was um feeding myself 
and it has been a very big subject in my life  

and veganism has just like turned switched off 
like the the the problem or the like the subject  

so um I don't know it's and it's also you know 
as a as a woman I don't I like I meet a lot of  

people a lot of women who are feminists but they 
are still eating meat and they're still eating  

eggs and they're still eating milk and and 
cheese and stuff and I have one friend who is  

uh feminist and uh vegan and we talk about 
about the conversions of uh fights and the  

alignments of beliefs and what you do in your uh 
physical life and you cannot be like be against  

something and then be blinded by some aspect of 
it you know if I understand and everybody has  

its own journey and everybody you know I'm not 
judging anyone from doing everybody is allowed  

to do whatever they want like I'm not offended 
when someone is eating a steak uh I'm just like  

you know do whatever you like it's it's fine um 
but I think I and I I think I don't know if you  

have felt that but I feel like 10 years ago it was 
really felt as an activist thing today I feel like  

it's getting more people are understanding more 
people that you don't need to to eat that much  

meat and even saying meat it feels like wrong to 
me like it's just like living animals like I don't  

understand dead carcass cadabvers like I don't 
Yeah i just understand i just don't understand  

like have you ever looked in into a cow's eyes 
like how how can you like how can you do that and  

and especially when when you have the awareness of 
how they're being treated in the slaughter house  

and how the dairy industry and the meat industry 
is the same and it's also um addressing a lot of  

it's so many abuses that I don't tolerate in 
my human life and I don't I will not I cannot  

be fully complete if I to I don't tolerate that 
for human but I tolerate that for other you know  

like right other species yeah why yeah and I and 
I you know and I just I really want to reiterate  

that if you're listening to this and you're not 
vegan like this is not meant to be judgmental  

this is really to talk about the systemic because 
I really think it's important to name that there  

are huge systems in place that are reinforcing 
the anti-feminist because most of the animals  

used in within the animal agricultural industry 
are female animals and on top of that we also have  

the all the environmental reasons including the 
use of water the destruction of land of air and  

water resources and the impact that it's having 
on our own bodies as well and so we're wanting  

to name like the systemic and also understanding 
that we all have different reasons for navigating  

um our own health or needs and um how we connect 
with food because I think this connects to the  

AI conversation because I know a lot of people 
talk about AI as being resource intensive and  

being bad for the planet and I always find it 
interesting that that's very easily taken on by  

people but there's been millions of dollars that's 
been invested to keep that same knowledge around  

production of um animal agriculture and how it's 
also destruct destroying the planet and taking  

water and air resources and land resources away 
from us as well and so I was wanting to name that  

here on this podcast because it is information 
that doesn't get out very much and it's also  

something that I agree with you 10 years ago was 
seen as subculture as not that big but we are  

living in a renaissance now of like veganism and 
know both in Paris and Los Angeles and Mexico City  

and all over the world there are so many vegan 
places that are open and people understanding  

why it's such a delicious and divine way of eating 
and that you don't really miss anything once you  

are in it and I I've been vegetarian vegan since 
I was 13 so at this point I don't even remember  

what it was like to not exist in that way and so 
if you're curious about that lifestyle just want  

to share that it's something that it can actually 
be really affirming and supportive for you so just  

wanting to name that and and it's such a gift to 
connect with you i'm like so in awe of everything  

you're making and creating and the many ways that 
you're showing up in the world and would love to  

invite you to share how people can get in touch 
with you how they can see your artwork in case  

they're interested in learning more about you um 
so social media uh I'm still there um I'm on all  

of the platforms it's my name is an Anne Horel I have 
a website as well that I keep updated as much as  

I can and I also have a portfolio that I try to 
update regularly that you can see on my website  

and if Instagram collapses tomorrow uh my website 
will still be will be there yes and yeah and this  

this is where this is where you can find me yeah 
well thank you so much for being on your art is  

a spell like your art Anne is definitely a spell 
and I'm so excited to know that you're creating  

some new spells that you're going to be sharing 
soon and please send me that information for  

your upcoming exhibition so I can make sure to put 
it in the show notes as well in case some of our  

listeners are in France and want to go and visit 
your show in person yeah I would love that yeah  

well thank you so much thank you Edgar i hope you 
all enjoyed tuning in to that conversation as much  

as I enjoyed having it i really want to highlight 
a couple of things from the conversation I just  

had with an first of all I find it really 
interesting in being a fan of art and of  

art history seeing how many times new mediums and 
new technologies bring about so much fear within  

society and there is always a moment in time 
when artists are the courageous ones who dive  

deep into using these new technologies in their 
artwork and what ends up happening is that their  

art gets made fun of it gets critiqued it gets 
talked about like it's not real art and then years  

later it gets integrated into the canon and into 
what everyone deems of as art practice this is  

definitely happening today with digital art with 
generative art with AI art i am really excited to  

like open up this conversation with you all about 
these new art forms because they are so new they  

are so nent we are building them together and I 
feel like it's so important for us to have our  

contribution in the conversation about what these 
mediums are how they exist in our world and what  

kinds of realities we are creating with them and 
imagining with them i want to name these patterns  

because there's something that I've noticed 
happened with video art with TV with internet  

art with digital art with NFTS now with AI art it 
also happened with photography as well and I fully  

believe that there's something special about the 
artists that are not afraid to take on these new  

forms to explore them to glitch them to manipulate 
them and to bring them into their art forms and  

I know that there are so many conversations 
that need to be had we need to remain critical  

we need to keep asking for there to be changes in 
terms of who gets to own data who gets to create  

systems of data collection who gets to define how 
algorithms work all of this needs to be talked  

about because these types of technologies are 
going to continue to have an impact on our world  

and I think it's important for us to stay engaged 
and in communication with these practices so that  

we can change them and create them so that they 
don't get created in other people's imaginaries  

other than our own our voices are so needed so 
I want to invite you all to comment let us know  

what you think of Anne Horel's art practice let 
us know what you think of all the conversations  

that we had around digital art around veganism 
around creating realities through magic and art  

spells would love to hear your thoughts in the 
comments thank you all so much for tuning in  

and do not forget that your art is a spell and it 
will change your life and the world around you bye