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" The Best Kept Secret in Silicon Valley " (China’s Academy of Art, Hangzhou, September 2015) piero scaruffi [email protected]

The Best Kept Secret in Silicon Valley

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Page 1: The Best Kept Secret in Silicon Valley

" The Best Kept Secret in

Silicon Valley "

(China’s Academy of Art, Hangzhou,

September 2015)

piero scaruffi

[email protected]

Page 2: The Best Kept Secret in Silicon Valley

Piero Scaruffi

• piero scaruffi

[email protected]

[email protected]

• Cultural historian

• Technology analyst

• 30+ years in Silicon Valley

• Pioneered A.I. and Internet

applications

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Silicon Valley in 1950

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Why did it happen here?

• The technology, the money and the brains were on the East Coast and in Europe (the great electronic research labs, the great mathematicians, Wall Street, etc)

• The great universities were on the East Coast (MIT, Harvard, Moore School, Princeton, Columbia), and in Europe (Cambridge)

• Bell Labs, RCA Labs, IBM Labs

• East Coast, Britain and Germany won most of the Nobel prizes

• Transistor, computer, etc all invented elsewhere

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Silicon Valley 2015

• World's #1 company in…

– Internet services: Google

– Social Media: Facebook

– Semiconductors: Intel

– Business software: Oracle

• Most valued company in the world: Apple

• 18,000 startups

• Location with the most venture capital: 3000 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Park

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GDP ($million):

1 USA 16,800,000

2 China 9,240,270

3 Japan 4,901,530

4 Germany 3,634,823

5 France 2,734,949

6 Britain 2,522,261

7 Brazil 2,245,673

8 Russia 2,096,777

9 Italy 2,071,307

10 India 1,876,797

11 Canada 1,825,096

12 Australia 1,560,597

13 Spain 1,358,263

14 South Korea 1,304,554

15 Mexico 1,260,915

16 Indonesia 868,346

17 Turkey 820,207

18 Netherlands 800,173

19 Saudi Arabia 745,273

20 Switzerland 650,782

21 Argentina 611,755

San Francisco Bay Area ~600,000 (8 million people)

GDP per capita ($): 1 Qatar 98,814 2 Luxembourg 78,670 San Francisco Bay Area 74,815 3 Singapore 64,584 4 Norway 54,947 5 Brunei 53,431 6 United States 53,101 (World Bank, 2013)

Nobel Prizes (2014) 1. USA 349 2. Britain 116 3. Germany 101 4. France 66 San Francisco Bay Area 43 • Sweden 30 • Russia 27 • Switzerland 26 • Canada 23 • Austria 22 • Italy 20 • Japan 19

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Today

7

1950

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Why did it happen here?

• The official history of Silicon Valley

– Defense/DARPA

– Fred Terman at Stanford and Stanford Industrial Park

– William Shockley’s lab

– Fairchild/Intel/semiconductors

– Xerox PARC, SRI Intl/computer-human interface

– Apple, personal computing, videogames

– Unix, Internet, Relational databases

– The dotcoms

– Google, Facebook, …

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Why is it called “Silicon” valley?

• Intel 4004 (1971)

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What was special about the

San Francisco Bay Area

before 1971?

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Before 1971…

1902: California Society of Artists

1903: Halcyon, a utopian community

1906: American Arts and Crafts Movement moves to San Francisco (Arthur Mathews)

1907: California College of the Arts and Crafts (Frederick Meyer)

The "Montgomery Block" (Frank Pixley's literary magazine the "Argonaut)

1913: Carmel’s artist community (Armin Hansen, Percy Gray, William Merritt

1913: Society of Etchers (Ralph Stackpole)

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Before 1971…

1915: The Panama-Pacific International Exposition (Bernard Maybeck’s Palace of Fine Arts)

1921: Ansel Adams’ photographs of Yosemite

1912: Charles Seeger at UC Berkeley, Henry Cowell’s "The Tides of Manaunaun"

1921: East-West Art Society (Chiura Obata)

1930: Henry Cowell (John Cage’s teacher) commissions Leon Theremin to create the first electronic rhythm machine (the "Rhythmicon")

1930: Hans Hofmann @ U.C. Berkeley

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Before 1971…

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Before 1971…

1930s: Achilles Rizzoli

Dominant fine art: photography: Dorothea Lange, Imogen Cunningham, James Weston,

1932: Group f/ exhibition

1930s: Wall painting (Edith Hamlin’s Mission High School mural)

1935: San Francisco Museum of Art (Grace Morley)

1939: Golden Gate International Exposition @ Treasure Island (Ralph Stackpole's 24-meter tall "Pacifica")

1939: Villa Montalvo’s artist residency program

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Before 1971…

Cunningham: “Three Dancers” (1929)

Lange:

“Migrant Mother” (1936)

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Before 1971…

1943: David Park @ California School of Fine Arts

1945: Photography Department @ California School of Fine Arts/ San Francisco Art Institute (Ansel Adams, Minor White, Dorothea Lange, Imogen Cunningham)

1946: Frank Stauffacher’s "Art in Cinema" series @ Museum of Art + Sidney Peterson’s avantgarde cinema @ California School of the Arts

1947: Mark Rothko @ California College of Arts and Crafts

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Before 1971… 1947: Festival of Modern Poetry

1951: “Dynaton” painters @ Mill Valley (surrealist painter Wolfgang Paalen)

1952: Wally Hedrick’s collages of junk metal

1952: King Ubu/Six Gallery artist-run cooperative (Jay DeFeo)

1953: Zen apostle Alan Watts’ radio program at Berkeley's KPFA station

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Before 1971…

1950s: "Bay Area Figurative Painting” (David Park, Elmer Bischoff, Richard Diebenkorn)

1950s: Lou Harrison incorporates Chinese opera, Native-American folk, jazz and Indonesian gamelan into Western classical music

1950s: "San Francisco Renaissance" (poets Kenneth Rexroth, Madeline Gleason, Robert Duncan, William Everson, Muriel Rukeyser)

1950s: "Beat generation" (writers Jack Kerouac and Robert Creeley from New York, Michael McClure and Jack Spicer in Berkeley, Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen from Oregon)

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Before 1971… 1953: Peter Martin’s and Lawrence

Ferlinghetti’s bookstore "City Lights”

1954: Poetry Center @ San Francisco State University (Madeline Gleason)

1955: Allen Ginsberg's recitation of "Howl" @ Six Gallery

1957: Contemporary Bay Area Figurative Painting exhibition

1957: San Francisco International Film Festival

1959: Rat Bastard Protective Association (junk sculptor Bruce Conner)

1959: Ron Davis’ Mime Troupe

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Before 1971…

1959: Funk movement (sculptors Peter Voulkos, Robert Arneson)

1960: Wayne Thiebaud @ UC Davis (pop art)

1961: Bruce Baillie and Mildred Strands’ San Francisco Cinematheque + Bruce Baillie’s artist-run cooperative Canyon Cinema

1962: San Francisco Tape Music Center (Morton Subotnick, Pauline Oliveros, Terry Riley)

1962: Michael Murphy’s Esalen Institute at Big Sur for "spiritual healing"

1963: Don Buchla’s electronic synthesizer

1963: First public showing of computer art @ San Jose State University (Joan Shogren)

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Before 1971…

1964: Mario Savio’s "Free Speech Movement" at U.C. Berkeley

1965: Max Scherr’s political magazine "Berkeley Barb"

1965: Ken Kesey’s "Merry Pranksters"

1965: Owsley "Bear" Stanley manufactures LSD at home

1965: Ron Davis’ essay "Guerrilla Theatre"

1965: Family Dog Production (the first hippie festival)

1966: Bruce Nauman @ San Francisco Art Institute (pop art)

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Before 1971…

1966: Magazine “San Francisco Oracle”

1966: "Diggers", a group of improvising actors and activists

1966: The first "Summer of Love" of the hippies

1966: Black Panther Party

1967: The first "Human Be-In" @ Golden Gate Park

1967: Rock festival @ Monterey

1967: John Lion’s Magic Theatre

1968: Stewart Brand’s "Whole Earth Catalog"

1968: Chip Lord’s Ant Farm ( avantgarde architecture and design)

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Before 1971…

1967: Ali Akbar Khan’s College of Music

1968: Robert Crumb’s comic book "Zap Comix" (1968) + first comics-only store in the USA (Gary Arlington)

1969: United Nations’ conference titled "Man and his Environment" in San Francisco

1969: Exploratorium at the Palace of Fine Arts + "Cybernetic Serendipity", an exhibition of computer art 1970: Roger Brand's comic magazine "Real Pulp Comics" 1970: San Francisco celebrates the first "Earth Day"

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Before 1971…

1970: Artist in residency program at Xerox PARC

1970: "Gay Pride Parade"

1971: "Feminist Art Program" at the California Institute of the Arts

1971: George Lucas’ Lucasfilms

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Until the 1960s the Bay Area was mainly famous for

– Eccentric artists/writers

– Anti-war protests

– Anti-capitalist protests

– Hippies

– Rock music

– Environmentalism

– Women’s and Gay’s Liberation Movements

– Eastern spirituality

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Why Silicon Valley?

The first major wave of immigration of young educated people from all over the world took place during the hippy era (“Summer of Love”)

The first major wave of technology

was driven by independents, amateurs and hobbyists (From ham radio to the Homebrew Computer Club)

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Anti-corporate sentiment

• The start-ups implement principles

of the hippy commune

• SRI Intl and Xerox PARC:

computation for the masses,

augmented intelligence

Xerox PARC

The first mouse

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Why Silicon Valley?

• The Bay Area recasts both Unix and the

Internet as idealistic grass-roots

movements

• Young educated people wanted to

change the world

• They did

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Dysfunctional synergy between two opposite

poles

– The rational and the irrational

– Technologists and anti-technologists

– Hippies and engineers

– Amateurs and corporations

– Nerds and outlaws (the "traitors", Jobs,

Ellison, Zuckerberg, hackers, Google that

copies all the information in the world without

permission)

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Innovation is a vague word: everything is an "innovation". What kind of innovation does Silicon Valley specialize in?

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Why Silicon Valley?

• What Silicon Valley does best

– Not invented here: computer, transistor, integrated circuit, robots, Artificial Intelligence, programming languages, databases, videogames, Internet, personal computers, World-wide web, search engines, social media, smartphones, wearable computing, space exploration, electrical cars, driverless cars…

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Why Silicon Valley?

• What Silicon Valley does best

– Invented here: disrupting products

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Culture of failure: it comes from the artists (risk inherent in being an artist)

• Culture of success: it comes from the artists (congrats if you make a lot of money out of the crazy ideas you had)

• Meritocracy: it comes from the artists (industrial power is usually inherited)

• Casual work environment - just like an artist’s studio

• Silicon Valley is about the garage (like the artists)

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Crowdfunding, peer-to-peer file

sharing, the gift economy and the

sharing economy are NOT natural

consequences of traditional industrial

capitalistic society

• but they are a natural consequence of

the artists' way of life

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Why Silicon Valley?

• Lots of art is not enough, otherwise Europe

(and the East Coast) would easily outclass

Silicon Valley

• It is “who” created the spirit of the society

that matters: was the spirit created by the

artists, by the industry, by the aristocracy,

…?

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Art/Tech/Science Organizations

• Leonardo ISAST leonardo.info (Frank Malina, 1967)

• YLEM (Trudy Reagan & Howard Pearlmutter, 1981)

• UC Berkeley's Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium

(Ken Goldberg, 1997)

• Zero1 zero1.org (Andy Cunningham, 2000)

• LASERs lasertalks.com (Piero Scaruffi, 2008)

• BAASICS baasics.com (Selene Foster and Christopher

Reiger, 2011)

• Life Art Science Technology (LAST) festival

lastfestival.com (Piero Scaruffi, 2014)

• Djerassi's Scientific Delirium Madness (Margot Knight,

2014)

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37 www.lasertalks.com

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USF Berkeley

Stanford

UCLA

New York

Washington UC Santa

Cruz

UC Davis

Austin

Toronto

Kansas

Seattle

London

Berlin

Zurich

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The 3rd LAST Festival Life Art Science Technology festival

October 2015

Stanford Univ

www.lastfestival.cn

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LAST Festival

• A weekend-long interdisciplinary event consisting of:

– 1. A dozen digital interactive art installations (the "Art

Expo”)

– 2. A symposium (“Engineering the Future”) on the state

of the sciences that are shaping the 21st century.

– 3. A mini-symposium (“Homo Digitalis”) on the impact

that digital media are having on the human mind.

– 4. Demos of new technology (“The Playground”)

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LAST Festival

• Schedule:

– Friday, 6pm – 10pm: Art Expo

– Saturday

• 1pm - 5pm: Symposium - Engineering the

Future

• 1pm - 10pm: Art Expo

– Sunday, 1pm-4pm: Homo Digitalis

• www.lastfestival.cn

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Replicating Silicon Valley The rest of the world consistently failed to create

their own Silicon Valleys:

• Sophia Antipolis (France)

• Oulu (Finland)

• Skolkovo (Russia)

• Hsinchu (Taiwan)

• Cyberjaya (Malaysia)

• Bangalore (India)

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Progress does not need SV

• Case study #2: “Western World 1880-1910”

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Progress does not need SV

• One century ago, within a relatively short period of time, the world adopted:

– the car,

– the airplane,

– the telephone,

– the radio

– the record

– cinema

• while at the same time the visual arts went through

– Impressionism,

– Cubism

– Expressionism

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Progress does not need SV

• while at the same time science came up with

– Quantum Mechanics

– Relativity

• while at the same time the office was revolutionized by

– cash registers,

– adding machines,

– typewriters

• while at the same time the home was revolutionized by

– dishwasher,

– refrigerator,

– air conditioning

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Progress does not need SV

• while at the same time cities adopted high-rise

buildings

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Progress does not need SV

• There were only 5 radio stations in 1921 but already 525 in 1923

• The USA produced 11,200 cars in 1903, but already 1.5 million in 1916

• By 1917 a whopping 40% of households had a telephone in the USA up from 5% in 1900.

• The Wright brothers flew the first plane in 1903: during World War I (1915-18) more than 200,000 planes were built

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… but it may need the arts…

• Accelerating progress happened

simultaneously in the sciences and the arts

Monet Stravinsky Einstein Gaudi Edison

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Creativity

• Why did it happen here? In Athens? In Florence? …?

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Creativity

• Creativity's peaks often correspond with periods

of great instability: classical Athens (at war 60%

of the time), 12th-13th century Venice (built on a

mosquito-infected lagoon by homeless refugees),

the Renaissance (Italy split in dozens of small

states and engulfed in endemic warfare), the 20th

century (two World Wars and a Cold War).

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What is unique about humans?

• Animals live the same life of their parents

• Humans are the only species whose life

style changes from generation to generation

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What is unique about humans?

• Children disobey, teenagers are rebels

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What is unique about humans?

• Animals only “innovate” when there is a

genetic mutation

• Humans innovate all the time

Beaver civilization over the millennia Human civilization over the millennia

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What is unique about humans?

• Art is pervasive in nature (eg birds make nests and

sing, bees dance, spiderwebs, humpback whale

songs, etc)

• Each animal has the same aesthetic, generation

after generation

• Human aesthetic changes from generation to

generation

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What is unique about humans?

…….

Human aesthetic over the centuries

Spider aesthetic over the centuries

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What is unique about humans?

• Being creative is the natural state of the human

mind

• Creativity is what truly sets humans apart from

other living beings

• It is unnatural for the human race to be creative

only in one field

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Welcome to the 21st Century

• From Descartes to Relativity and Quantum

Mechanics: how can Religion and Science

coexist

• CP Snow (1959): how can the Humanities

and Science coexist

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Big Data

Images by Margot Gerritsen, Tim Davis & Yifan Hu

http://www.cise.ufl.edu/research/sparse/matrices/

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Hessian matrix from a quadratic programming problem

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Frequency-domain circuit simulation

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Linear programming problem

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Computational fluid dynamics: shallow-water equations

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Linear programming problem

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Social network: people and the web pages they like

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Robots 2000: Cynthia Breazeal's emotional robot, "Kismet"

2003: Hiroshi Ishiguro's Actroid, a young woman

Which is the robot?

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Robots 2004: Mark Tilden's biomorphic robot Robosapien

2005: Honda's humanoid robot "Asimo"

Asimo over the years

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Robots Special purpose robots:

2001: NEC PaPeRo (a social robot targeting children)

2005: Toyota's Partner (designed for assistance and elderly

care applications)

2007: RobotCub Consortium aggreement, the iCub (for

research in embodied cognition)

2008: Aldebaran Robotics' Nao (for research and education)

2010: NASA's Robonaut-2 (for exploration)

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Robots 2005: Boston Dynamics' quadruped robot "BigDog“

2008: Nexi (MIT Media Lab), a mobile-dexterous-social robot

2010: Lola Canamero's Nao, a robot that can show its

emotions

2011: Osamu Hasegawa's SOINN-based robot that learns

functions it was not programmed to do

2012: Rodney Brooks' hand programmable robot "Baxter"

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Robots

• Stats

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Trivia

• Japanese robots tend to be female because

they look less threatening

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Robots in Cinema

• “Metropolis” (1927)

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Robots in Cinema

• “Ex Machina” (2015)

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Robots in Theater

• Oriza Hirata’s robot theater

“I, Worker” (2008)

“Sayonara” (2010)

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The future?

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The future?

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The future?

• Moore’s law

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The future?

• “Taking a step forward is easy… just make

sure what you are stepping into” (Piero’s law)

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The future?

• Artists know better!

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The future!

80 Songzhuang (Beijing) China Academy of Art (Hangzhou)

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The future!

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