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AI Images 

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Researcher Carleigh Milburn collects survey data and extracts keywords related to decolonization. These keywords will be anonymously uploaded into AI software, generating a collaborative image based on the provided terms. This exercise aims to illustrate how AI can assist in visualizing or conceptualizing decolonization based on human brainstorming.

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Privacy

Your participation in this study involves sending your answers to question(s) 5,6 from the survey to a third-party platform, DALL-E Open AI. Rest assured, this platform will only use the keywords from your answers, not your personal information or other survey responses. Researcher Carleigh Milburn will manually input these keywords into the software to co-create an image. Visit the platform's website https://chat.openai.com/g/g-2fkFE8rbu-dall-e for detailed information about data protection.  Once your data has been processed for the specific purposes mentioned above, it will be deleted from the third party’s platform and used as an outcome of the project displayed in physical galleries.

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The images below were created using survey data from participants, with the assistance of AI.

Making Sense of Decolonization 

 

The project acknowledges that Ka’tarohkwi ("a place where there is clay" or "a place where there is limestone") is located on the traditional territories of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, and Huron-Wendat and serves as a gathering place for many Métis Nation members. This acknowledgment evolves as we deepen our understanding through community engagement and interactions with the land, both physically and digitally.

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Exhibited at four key venues—the Kingston School of Art, The Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning, Modern Fuel, and Union Gallery—these partners represent the four directions and the interconnectedness of Kingston’s artistic communities.

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Born out of a 500 sq ft apartment, this project was made possible by those committed to understanding decolonization. Miigwech—to give thanks, give back, and return the favour to the land, our ancestors, and everyone involved. 

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