As an official Pavilion in The Wrong Biennale 7th Edition, Negotiated Intelligence explores the dynamic and often asymmetrical negotiation between human creativity and AI intelligence. 
We seek works that illuminate the fluid interplay of human intentionality — conceptualization, iterative guidance, and critical refinement — and AI's generative contributions — serendipitous pattern recognition, unexpected mutations, and computational creativity. We map the evolving creative process where artists navigate uncertainty, leveraging AI as both a tool and a collaborator.
The central idea of this exhibition focuses on Process Archaeology mapping the power dynamics between you, human artists and AI.
We require works to document the creative process through the following artifacts:

1.   Human Labor Ledger:
  • Time-stamped logs comparing concept development hours to AI processing time
  • Records of deliberate artistic decisions overriding or refining AI outputs
  • Analysis of the percentage of the final work shaped by human intervention

2.  AI's Creative Profile:
  • Technical reports identifying moments of "creative divergence" (unpredictable outputs that influenced the artistic trajectory).
  • Analysis of AI-generated elements and their significance in the final piece 


After the selection deadline of works, Negotiated Intelligence curators will create a dedicated website presenting a critical interface that engages the audience with your final artwork.  
The website will present a chronology with power analytics for your creative process, featuring:
  • Human Intentions: Your pre-AI creative groundwork, original concepts, sketches, and mood boards.
  • Negotiation Arena: Your documentation of the iterative exchanges between the artist and AI, such as visualizations of decision points where human and machine inputs intersect.
  • Emergent Hybridity: Your final artworks.

Pavillion Open Call Selection Criteria:
The work in this Pavillion will need to demonstrate human agency as the driving force and AI as a collaborative partner:
  • Demonstrate dominant creative ownership through pre-AI concept validity (e.g., dated sketches, writings, or prototypes).
  • Showcase significant post-generation transformative labor (e.g., manual editing, recontextualization, or reinterpretation of AI outputs).
  • Please include AI model details
  • Documentations highlight moments where AI introduced unexpected or non-deterministic elements that enriched the creative process.
  • Acknowledge technical constraints or limitations of the AI model that required human intervention.

Please submit your work and any questions to the curator, Chun Wang, at chunwang.me@gmail.com

Happy Creating!







MTAA, Simple Net Art Diagram, ca. 1997. 
https://anthology.rhizome.org/simple-net-art-diagram