The Latin phrase ‘scientia potentia est’, or ‘data is energy’, appears particularly related to our post-truth age of misinformation and deepfake know-how. Social media is rife with out-of-context speculations and conspiracy theories, whereas mainstream media sometimes delivers experiences with little adherence to concrete info, with the worst tabloids leaning in direction of emotional manipulation. That is the framework from which Renwei Liu’s Edited Actuality sequence is born.
Consisting of 4 animated movies, every section revolves round a seemingly peculiar slice of life that the male protagonist has discovered themselves partaking, akin to a subway trip or a stroll within the forest. Then comes the twist; the protagonist all of the sudden embodies the function of a information reporter, narrating his state of affairs as if it had been against the law scene. Within the subway situation, an orange positioned on a seat by a lady with a silver briefcase has been reframed as an tried terrorist bomb menace. ‘I’ve seen so many tales like this on the information – bombs, assaults – however none of it has ever really occurred round me. So, I make it occur,’ says the daydreaming workplace employee with a morning routine that by no means modifications.

Different eventualities contain a person in a tea restaurant recognizing a fugitive movie star, or a late-night session in a biochemical laboratory sensationalised because the beginnings of an apocalyptic disaster. Even the concept that aliens positioned down massive stones in a forest river appears oddly plausible, relying on one’s perception in superior civilisations visiting Earth and lending its civilisations a serving to hand. Regardless, Liu’s simulated realities contact on vital points regarding how data will be simply manipulated and repurposed for dramatic impact. ‘Within the eyes of those that pull the strings of viral visitors, I, and my laboratory, are nothing however the excellent uncooked supplies for montage.’


Edited Actuality firmly sits alongside a wealthy corpus of works utilizing the idea of altered narratives to look at how society reconciles with influxes of actual and fictional datasets, akin to Weronika Gęsicka’s Encyclopaedia or American Glitch by Andrea Orejarena and Caleb Stein. Whereas each capitalise on pictures’s conventional repute as an agent of reality, the animated nature of Liu’s piece is inherently self-referential on the subject of the viewers’s expectation of a false actuality. The additional reportage solely serves for instance the purpose additional, questioning the credibility of a information broadcast no matter format and the way data is disseminated.


Liu’s follow poignantly acknowledges that the move of knowledge is a posh sport of charades, dictated by algorithms, emotional affect, and hidden agendas. Mix it with a touch of AI deepfakes and you’ve got an elaborate concoction that blurs the boundaries between truth and fiction.


To cite from the lab technician: ‘On this period, actuality is rarely found. It’s manufactured.’

