Beyond the “Fake”: Martyna Marciniak’s Artwork, Anatomy of Non-Fact, Explores Synthetic Images
Beyond the “Fake”: Martyna Marciniak’s Artwork, Anatomy of Non-Fact, Explores Synthetic Images
Joël Chevrier has been a Physics Professor at Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA) since 1998. This article discusses artist Martyna Marciniak’s work, ‘Anatomy of Non-Fact’, which uses images moving from optical images (photography as it comes out XIX century) to non-optical images or synthetic images as generated by AI.
Martyna Marciniak: “to examine how design and technology shape ideologies and social structures”
In 2025, Martyna Marciniak is artist-in-residence at CERN in Geneva, in collaboration with Copenhagen Contemporary. CERN introduces her practice as follows: “Marciniak’s interdisciplinary practice combines spatial storytelling, speculative fiction and 3D reconstruction to examine how design and technology shape ideologies and social structures.” Her work, rooted in the present moment, draws attention to the immense and irreversible transformation of the world brought about by the powerful alliance of design, technology and science—what we might call “the Tech”. Her work raises pressing questions: who is truly able to control, or even measure—let alone anticipate—these sweeping transitions?
A Pope in a Balenciaga puffer? That doesn’t exist…
In 2023, an image appeared showing Pope Francis clad in a white Balenciaga puffer coat. The image went viral, far beyond the expectations of its creator, Pablo Xavier, a passionate user of the AI tool MidJourney. For him, this synthetic image was clearly a “fake”, a playful product of his experiments with AI. But for much of the world, it wasn’t recognized as such. People failed to grasp the scale and violence of the transition underway. The rapid production and instantaneous global dissemination of synthetic images has become accessible to everyone, requiring no training or particular skill. In her work Anatomy of Non-Fact, Martyna Marciniak explores, as an artist, this radical shift in our relationship to the image.
Photographic or optical images versus synthetic or non-optical images
Synthetic images are entirely shaped by XXI century science and technology. But unlike photographs—here named optical images—there is no need to capture a real-world scene. Nineteenth-century photography enabled the recording of optical images on a screen through chemical and physical engineering. It is a process rooted in real interactions between light and matter. Photography is physically constrained: reality imposes itself on the image. This is no longer the case with synthetic imaging. Its foundations lie in nanotechnology, computing, big data processing, and thus AI. It manipulates digital data on a digital screen—the image’s substrate—and can generate any conceivable image. Thanks to AI, what appears on the screen is exactly what the creator intends, down to the last pixel. Total freedom.
A “mise en abyme”: a fake Pope in a Balenciaga puffer—clearly fake, but still real
In a video trailer titled AI Hyperrealism, Martyna Marciniak presents a real person who strongly resembles Pope Francis, dressed in an actual Balenciaga puffer. She thus takes Pablo Xavier’s synthetic fake one step further, anchoring the imaginary scene he created in the physical world through a staged re-enactment. Yet it remains a fake—it is not the real Pope Francis, still alive at the time, strolling about at Marciniak’s behest. What we see is a real-life scene, filmed in the traditional way. This optical image becomes a faithful recording of the material incarnation of an entirely artificial “synthetic image”—what Marciniak calls a “post-optical” or “non-optical” image. And yet it is astoundingly convincing. The “mise en abyme” is dizzying.
The first age of the image: drawing, painting and engraving
Marciniak’s term “non-optical image” highlights a pivotal shift in image-making that began with the invention of photography in the 19th century. Before that, humanity’s images were hand-drawn, painted or engraved. Artists placed on a surface what they intended to represent. Their only constraint was technical, though often a demanding one: a painter could only paint what they were capable of rendering. This work on the “appearance of reality”, regardless of style—from Botticelli to Rembrandt to Picasso—fills the world’s museums. A multitude of styles, histories, narratives and revolutions bears witness to the extraordinary richness of human visual creation.
The second age of the image: Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey and the first optical images of Athens

North facade and colonnade of the Parthenon on the Acropolis, Athens.
Daguerreotype by Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey (1842)
Following the 1839 invention of photography by Nicéphore Niépce and Louis Daguerre, image quality and recording techniques advanced at lightning speed. By the 1840s, Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey was producing the first photographic images of Athens, Jerusalem, and Cairo. Roger Fenton photographed the Crimean War in 1855. War photographers have since risked their lives to document conflicts around the globe. Robert Capa’s brutal maxim still resonates: “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough.”
For nearly two centuries, photography remained the gold standard. To most, a photograph was indisputable evidence of reality. Of course, some images were doctored—but doing so was technically complex, and such efforts merely reinforced the status of optical images, their truth-value guaranteed by physics and chemistry.
The third age of the image: From optical to synthetic images in the 21st century
Today’s billions of smartphones have exploded the number of photographs—optical images—being produced. But now these photographs exist within a wider ecosystem of synthetic imagery. Every photo can be digitally altered at the moment of capture or after. The distinction between photographic and synthetic images grows harder to discern, but synthetic images are fast becoming the norm. In this early 21st century, one might feel we’ve returned to the era before photography—when all images were purely human-made. Indeed, the image-maker is once again fully in control. With AI, one can define every aspect of the image, pixel by pixel. But this is not a simple return to the past, and Marciniak’s work makes that very clear.
The synthetic image: between painting and the photographic image?
In the 19th and 20th centuries, photography swept everything before it, offering a faithful depiction of reality, swift execution, ease of use, mass reproduction and dissemination. Yet now photography—an optical image—may itself be swept away by the rise of synthetic, non-optical imagery. With Anatomy of Non-Fact, Martyna Marciniak confronts us with an even deeper abyss. Deliberately so? We have no reason to doubt that her video was made with an actor, a set and a camera. She tells us so—we can take her word for it. But how can we truly be sure? If she had instead generated the video using AI, would we be able to tell? And more importantly, would it make any difference…?
Beside Martyna Marciniak, do we need help of French sociologist and philosopher Jean Baudrillard to explore fake news or alternative facts?
In his book Simulacra and Simulation (1961) the French philosopher and sociologist Jean Baudrillard wrote:
“Thus, feigning or dissimulating leaves the reality principle intact: the difference is always clear, it is only masked; whereas simulation threatens the difference between “true” and “false”, between “real” and “imaginary”.”
Returning to this work, Simulacra and Simulation, in order to follow Martyna Marciniak more closely, one is struck by the fact that, in the era of synthetic images — themselves performative in the real and/or virtual world — the very notions of fake news or alternative facts are not defined in relation to reality or truth.
Jean Baudrillard had already introduced four successive phases of the image.
“These would be the successive phases of the image:
1 – It is the reflection of a basic reality.
2 – It masks and perverts a basic reality.
3 – It masks the absence of a basic reality.
4 – It bears no relation to any reality whatever: it is its own pure simulacrum.”
« In the first case, the image is a good appearance: the representation is of the order of sacrament. In the second, it is an evil appearance: of the order of malefice. In the third, it plays at being an appearance: it is of the order of sorcery. In the fourth, it is no longer in the order of appearance at all, but of simulation. »
Images produced by AI have long surpassed level two, passed level three, and have probably reached level four.
Baudrillard’s book opens with a quote from Ecclesiastes, which is in fact entirely his own invention: “The simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth–it is the truth which conceals that there is none.”
The simulacrum is true.
The article was written by Joël Chevrier, a LCC member of Studiotopia project, as part of the project’s study visit. The original version of the article was published at Interalia Magazine. The French version of the article is available on this link.
Engineering Students Discover New Ways to Connect with the Living World
Engineering Students Discover New Ways to Connect with the Living World
The second Pop‑Up Lab at Hexagone (France) took place from 27 to 29 January 2026 at INP‑UGA/ENSE3 – Graduate School of Sustainable Engineering for Energy, Water and Environment in Grenoble. Once again led by circus and dance artist Fanny Soriano, the workshop invited engineering students to step outside analytical thinking and explore sensitive, emotional, and embodied approaches to the living world.
Through movement‑based experimentation, participants examined how humans can perceive and relate to other species beyond technical or rational frameworks. The workshop culminated in a conference by a senior engineer titled “How to Include the Living World in Engineering”, opening a dialogue on how future engineers might integrate ecological awareness into their professional practice.
Circus Artist Fanny Soriano Explores Human–Plant Relations in Grenoble
Circus Artist Explore Human–Plant Relations in Grenoble
From 13 to 15 January 2025, the University Grenoble Alpes/Design Factory hosted the first Pop‑Up Lab of the European project Studiotopia 2, led by circus artist Fanny Soriano. The artist is, with the help of neuroscientist Kalliopi Ioumpa, developing an interdisciplinary artistic research project examining how humans relate to invasive plant species—particularly Japanese knotweed.
Over three days, students engaged in a workshop blending circus arts, physical theatre, and ecological inquiry. Through movement exercises and direct interaction with knotweed, participants explored notions of symbiosis, imbalance, and the shifting boundaries between bodies and ecosystems.
“Getting back in touch with nature, with our bodies, being sensitive to what surrounds us, listening to our sensations, smelling and touching seems to me to be imperative if we are to evolve in this world in transition,” Soriano reflected at the end of the session.
“Earth Is a Sensorium” Sparks Interdisciplinary Dialogue at Ars Electronica Festival 2025
“Earth Is a Sensorium” Sparks Interdisciplinary Dialogue at Ars Electronica Festival 2025
The Ars Electronica Festival 2025 in Linz delivered yet another thought-provoking experience with the conference “Earth Is a Sensorium,” a session that explored how our understanding of the world shapes our actions within it. Held under the festival’s overarching theme of “Panic,” the event brought together leading voices from the sciences, humanities, law, and the arts to revisit and reimagine the concept of the Great Acceleration.
Rethinking the Great Acceleration
The session opened with a compelling lecture by Alexander Damianos (GB/GR) that traced the origins of the Great Acceleration – a term coined to describe the exponential rise in human activity and its planetary impact since the mid-20th century. From ocean acidification to GDP growth and the proliferation of fast-food chains, the charts that once illustrated this phenomenon have become cultural artifacts in their own right.
But the panel didn’t stop at extending these charts to the present day. Instead, it asked a deeper question: How have these visualizations influenced scientific institutions, public discourse, and our collective imagination? The conversation challenged attendees to consider not just the data, but the societal frameworks that shape and are shaped by it.
A Sensorium of Perspectives
The panel featured interdisciplinary insights that transformed the session into a living “sensorium” – a space where knowledge, perception, and emotion converged. Speakers; Owen Gaffney (IE/SE), Mark Williams (GB), Armen Avanessian (AT), Ulrike Felt (AT); each tackled the question: “How do the Great Acceleration charts sense and make sense of the world?” Their answers ranged from critiques of data colonialism to poetic reflections on ecological grief.
A Call to Action
“Earth Is a Sensorium” was more than a panel – it was a call to reimagine how we engage with the Earth as a dynamic, interconnected system. By blending data with dialogue, and analysis with art, the session underscored the urgency of updating not just our charts, but our collective consciousness.
As the Anthropocene continues to unfold, events like this remind us that the future of planetary stewardship lies in interdisciplinary collaboration and imaginative thinking. The sensorium is open – what we choose to sense, and how we respond, is up to us.
Studiotopia Collective Event: A World Café of Collaboration
The symposium’s final event – the Studiotopia Collective Event – brought together the artist-scientist duos who had spent months in residency across Europe. Designed as an interactive World Café, the session invited audiences to engage directly with the residents, exploring the diverse modes of art-science collaboration that emerged from the Studiotopia project.
Participants included:
- Julien Fezansis an artist in residency with Hexagone Scène Nationale, focusing on sound engineering, documentary, and theater.
- Justyna Górowskais an artist in residency with Centre for Contemporary Art Laznia, focusing on DNA digital data storage, sustainability, and data preservation.
- Cezar Mocanand Hung Lu Chan are artists in residency with Beta festival.
- Dmitry Morozovis an artist in residency with Kersnikova, focusing on contemporary media art including sound, robotics, and installations.
- Sybille Neumeyeris an artist in residency with Kersnikova, focusing on environmental issues, climate crisis, and ecological relationships.
- John Palmesinois an artist in residency with Ars Electronica, focusing on the Anthropocene.
- Masha Patsyukis an artist in residency with Hexagone Scène Nationale, focusing on film, digital arts, and performance.
- Lea Luka Sikauand Denisa Pubalova are artists in residency with LABoral, focusing on multisensory installations, vibroacoustics, and media art.
- Karolina Sobeckais an artist in residency with Centre for Contemporary Art Laznia, focusing on heat, healing, resistance, and energy flows.
- Fanny Sorianois an artist in residency with Hexagone Scène Nationale, focusing on body, animality, and metamorphosis.
- Miguel Teodorois an artist in residency with CYENS Centre of Excellence, focusing on materiality, geopolitics, and ecology.
- Laure Winantsand Adrien de Lucca are artists in residency with GLUON.
- Alexander Damianosis a scientist in residency with Ars Electronica, focusing on the Anthropocene.
- Marina Dermastiais a scientist in residency with Kersnikova, focusing on cell biology and botany.
- Cailean Finnis a scientist in residency with Beta festival.
- Kalliopi Ioumpais a scientist in residency with Hexagone Scène Nationale, focusing on social cognitive neuroscience, molecular biology, and experimental psychology.
- Ziggy O’Rileyis a scientist in residency with Kersnikova, focusing on human-robot interaction, moral and social cognition, and ethics of emerging technologies.
- Michał Piaseckiand Agnieszka Szostok are scientists in residency with Centre for Contemporary Art Laznia, focusing on heat, healing, resistance, and energy flows.
- Colas Schretter and Louise Delhayeare scientists in residency with GLUON.
The event showcased projects ranging from human-robot interaction and moral cognition to botany, geopolitics, and experimental psychology. It was a celebration of the messy, generative space where disciplines collide – and where new ways of sensing and responding to the world are born.
You can watch the video of the panel bellow.
3ème Pôle @EXPERIMENTA 2025
3ème Pôle
Installation and new forms of narrative @EXPERIMENTA 2025, Biennale organized by Hexagone Scène nationale
Taking the form of an installation made up of self-built vehicles and travel narratives, 3ème PÔLE is a research process hybridizing innovation, ecology and poetic reflection, dedicated to the creation of transformable mobile machines. Contemplative and interactive, the project is an invitation to reconsider sobriety, reemployment and establish another relationship with beings and things, to open unexpected ways, to inaugurate new narratives, to seek a more poetic way of inhabiting the world.
Based on the Lego process, the idea is to assemble different, reusable parts to build different machines and pieces of furniture that can be adapted to different seasons and environments. Combining mechanical form and poetic intent, the project clearly addresses the themes of versatility of use, the pleasure of constructing, the economy of means and the need for slowing down.
3ème PÔLE
Maxime Aumon Architect
Malo Lacroix Audiovisual artist
Production: Sinople
Co-production: ADEME
Supported by: the city of Ivry-sur-Seine, WT2I Agency & Studiotopia 2.0; a project co-financed by the Europe Creative program of the European Union.
3ème PÔLE was showcased during EXPERIMENTA 2025 from February 8th to March 1st, 2025 as part of the Studiotopia project. Click HERE for more information.
Extended Application Deadline for STUDIOTOPIA Residency Programme
Extended Application Deadline for STUDIOTOPIA Residency Programme
STUDIOTOPIA is announcing an extension for applications to its second edition of the Residency Programme, aimed at fostering collaboration between the arts and sciences to promote sustainable development.
The new deadline for submissions is now set for the 7th November 2024, at 23:59 CET.
Open Call Highlights:
- For Emerging Artists: Eight residencies will be offered to artists who will collaborate with established scientists, focusing on local sustainability and environmental challenges. For more details, refer to the Emerging Artists Challenge Booklet.
- For Young Scientists: Ten scientists will have the opportunity to work with renowned contemporary artists, developing creative responses to global and local challenges. For more details, refer to the Young Scientists Challenge Booklet.
Key Dates:
- Open Call Period: 4th September – 7th November 2024, at 23:59 CET
- Residency Duration: 12 months (December 2024 – December 2025)
- Exhibition Period: September 2025 – March 2027
This second edition of the Residency Programme represents an exciting opportunity for individuals ready to push the boundaries of their fields. By bringing together artists and scientists, the programme facilitates the exploration of the convergence of art and science in addressing today's most pressing environmental issues.
Watch both Info Sessions
Missed both Info Sessions?
Bellow you still have a chance to learn more about the STUDIOTOPIA Residency Programme for Emerging Artists and the Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists, both designed to foster collaboration between artists and scientists to tackle global sustainability challenges.
Don’t worry — you can watch the full recording:
- Full Recording of the First Info Session
- Full Recording of the Second Info Session : Emerging Artists
- Full Recording of the Second Info Session : Young Scientists
Programme Overview
- Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists: 10 early-career scientists will collaborate with contemporary artists over the course of one year.
- Residency Programme for Emerging Artists: 8 artists will partner with established scientists on research-driven projects focused on global and local sustainability challenges.
For additional questions, please contact:
- Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists: ramona@gluon.be
- Residency Programme for Emerging Artists: irina@cccluj.ro
Watch the First Info Session + Join Us for the Second One
Don’t Miss Our Second Info Session for the Open Call
Watch the First Info Session + Join Us for the Second One
Following the success of our first info session, we are excited to announce that the second session is just around the corner on October 9th at 10:30 CET.
This is your chance to learn more about the STUDIOTOPIA Residency Programme for Emerging Artists and the Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists, both designed to foster collaboration between artists and scientists to tackle global sustainability challenges.
During the first info session, we discussed:
- The goals of the STUDIOTOPIA project, with a focus on the Symbiocene.
- How artists and scientists collaborate over a 12-month period to address complex issues.
- Key details about the open call, including eligibility and how to apply.
- A comprehensive overview of the Fellowship and Residency programmes.
Missed the first session?
Don’t worry — you can watch the full recording HERE.
What to Expect at the Second Info Session?
In the upcoming session on October 9th, we will dive deeper into the collaboration opportunities available, answer additional questions, and provide more insights into how participants can push the boundaries of both art and science to create meaningful change. Don’t miss this chance to get all the information you need to apply!
Register for the second info session here: APPLY HERE.
Programme Overview
- Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists: 10 early-career scientists will collaborate with contemporary artists over the course of one year.
- Residency Programme for Emerging Artists: 8 artists will partner with established scientists on research-driven projects focused on global and local sustainability challenges.
For additional questions, please contact:
- Fellowship Programme for Young Scientists: ramona@gluon.be
- Residency Programme for Emerging Artists: irina@cccluj.ro
STUDIOTOPIA Announces Open Call During Ars Electronica 2024
STUDIOTOPIA unveils new opportunities for artists and scientists
STUDIOTOPIA Announces Open Call During Ars Electronica 2024
During this year’s Ars Electronica Festival, attended by over 112,000 visitors from around the world, the STUDIOTOPIA team announced the launch of the second edition of their prestigious Residency Programme. Aimed at fostering collaboration between artists and scientists, this programme is set to explore the theme of the Symbiocene and promote innovative, cross-disciplinary approaches to sustainable development.
The second edition of the STUDIOTOPIA Residency Programme invites emerging artists and young scientists to apply for a 12-month residency, during which they will collaborate on research-driven projects addressing both local and global environmental challenges. The programme, which was presented by the STUDIOTOPIA team at the Ars Electronica Festival 2024, seeks to break down barriers between disciplines. It offers participants the opportunity to engage deeply with both art and science, developing unique outputs that explore the interconnectedness of life on Earth.
Open Call Highlights:
- For Emerging Artists: Eight residencies will be offered to artists who will collaborate with established scientists, focusing on local sustainability and environmental challenges. For more details, refer to the Emerging Artists Challenge Booklet.
- For Young Scientists: Ten scientists will have the opportunity to work with renowned contemporary artists, developing creative responses to global and local challenges. For more details, refer to the Young Scientists Challenge Booklet.
Key Dates:
- Open Call Period: 4th September – 31st October 2024
- Residency Duration: 12 months (December 2024 – December 2025)
- Exhibition Period: September 2025 – March 2027
Info Sessions:
- 18th September 2024, 11:30 AM CEST
- 9th October 2024, 11:30 AM CEST
During these sessions, the STUDIOTOPIA team will provide an overview of the programme and answer all questions related to the application process, challenges, and residency details.
Register here.
This second edition of the Residency Programme represents an exciting opportunity for individuals ready to push the boundaries of their fields. By bringing together artists and scientists, the programme facilitates the exploration of the convergence of art and science in addressing today’s most pressing environmental issues.
Studiotopia 2
Studiotopia 2
11 European cultural and science organizations join forces for Studiotopia project
For the second time, an inspiring collaboration is underway as 11 prominent European cultural and science organizations come together under the banner of Studiotopia. This groundbreaking project aims to explore the intersection of art and science, delving into the symbiotic relationship between these two disciplines to shed light on the pressing issues of our time.
In an era marked by unprecedented challenges, the Studiotopia initiative seeks to harness the creative synergy between artists and scientists to address one overarching theme: the Symbiocene. This concept, coined by eco-philosopher Glenn Albrecht, envisions a future where humanity lives in harmony with the Earth and all its inhabitants, fostering mutual flourishing and interconnectedness.
Through Studiotopia, artists and scientists from diverse backgrounds collaborate on projects that illuminate the complexities of the Symbiocene. From exploring biodiversity hotspots to investigating sustainable technologies, each endeavor offers a unique perspective on our relationship with the natural world.
The participating organizations span across Europe, representing a rich tapestry of cultures and expertise:
Together, these institutions serve as catalysts for innovation and collaboration, fostering dialogue and exchange across disciplines and borders. By bringing together the best minds in art and science, Studiotopia aims to inspire new ways of thinking and acting in the face of global challenges.
Stay tuned as Studiotopia unfolds, presenting a tapestry of projects that celebrate the beauty of interdisciplinary collaboration and pave the way towards a more harmonious future for humanity and the planet.
























