The Artificial City Exhibition

Duration

October 6 - November 15, 2025

Curated By

Alper Turan, Visiting Assistant Professor, and Nick LiCausi, Director of Fabrication.

Photo of Artificial City models on display

The Artificial City is a design project that investigates the use of Al image generation as a creative method for producing architectural typologies, rethinking authorship, and exploring new modes of formal speculation. The project centers on the use of Midjourney to iteratively prompt, document, and analyze hundreds of urban fragments. Each Al-generated image becomes a starting point for design: abstract, partial, and open to interpretation. Through curation and visual interventions, these fragments are translated into physical and digital forms, forming the foundation of a speculative city whose logic is shaped less by urban planning than by emergent formal variation.

Image of exhibition with multiple images of red houses

The project began with a simple question: if Al can generate countless forms at once, how might the designer work with this one image at a time methodology. Rather than treating Al tools as efficiency engines for solving pre-set problems, The Artificial City embraces slowness, ambiguity, and interpretation. Images are not final products, they are prompts for future modeling, drawing, and recontextualization. This approach resists the idea that generative Al is merely a shortcut in the design process, instead treating it as a collaborator in speculative authorship.

Team
Andrew Audemard
Livi Bowers
Cadence Graf
Ignacio Massó Estévez
Andrea Santos
Gabriel Wetzstein
Helen Eubank Wexler

Fabrication
TuSABE Fabrication Labs
Nick LiCausi
Jesse Toohey

image of the artificial city entrance

Questions? Please reach out to Alper Turan at aturan@tulane.edu