Close Menu
TechurzTechurz
    What's Hot

    Slate Auto’s radically simple electric truck starts at $24,950

    June 24, 2026

    Valor Equity Partners looks to raise a $2.5B Fund VII, per Bloomberg

    June 24, 2026

    Superhuman acquires AI detection startup GPTZero

    June 23, 2026
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Tech Pulse
    • Slate Auto’s radically simple electric truck starts at $24,950
    • Valor Equity Partners looks to raise a $2.5B Fund VII, per Bloomberg
    • Superhuman acquires AI detection startup GPTZero
    • HaloBraid raises $7M from Seven Seven Six to end the six-hour hair salon appointment
    • 4 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit 2026
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    TechurzTechurz
    • Home
    • Tech Pulse
    • Future Tech
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    TechurzTechurz
    Home - AI - Indigenous knowledge meets artificial intelligence
    AI

    Indigenous knowledge meets artificial intelligence

    TechurzBy TechurzAugust 16, 2025Updated:May 10, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Indigenous knowledge meets artificial intelligence
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Suzanne Kite’s AI art installations, for example, model a Lakota framework of data sovereignty: intelligence that emerges only through reciprocal, consensual interaction. Unlike systems that assume user consent via opaque terms of service, her kinetic machines require the viewer’s physical presence—and give something back in return. 

    “It’s my data. It’s my training set. I know exactly what I did to train it. It’s not a large model but a small and intimate one,” Kite says. “I’m not particularly interested in making the most technologically advanced anything. I’m an artist; I don’t make tech demos. So the complexity needs to come at many layers—not just the technical.”

    Where Kite builds working prototypes of consent-based AI, other artists in this cohort explore how sound, robotics, and performance can confront the logic of automation, surveillance, and extraction. But Native people have never been separate from technology. The land, labor, and lifeways that built America’s infrastructure—including its tech—are Indigenous. The question isn’t whether Native cultures are contributing now, but why they were ever considered separate. 

    Native technologies reject the false binaries foundational to much Western innovation. These artists ask a more radical question: What if intelligence couldn’t be gathered until a relationship had been established? What if the default were refusal, not extraction? These artists aren’t asking to be included in today’s systems. They’re building what should come next.

    Table of contents
    1 Suzanne Kite
    2 Raven Chacon
    3 Nicholas Galanin

    Suzanne Kite

    Wičhíŋčala Šakówiŋ (Seven Little Girls)
    2023
    For Kite, the fundamental flaw of Western technology is its severance of knowledge from the body. In this installation, a four-meter hair braid with embedded sensors translates the artist’s body movements into machine-learning algorithms. During her live performance, Kite dances while the braid reads the force and rhythm of her gestures, generating audio responses that fill the museum gallery of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Below her, stones arranged in patterns reflecting Lakota star maps anchor the performance in traditional astronomical knowledge.

    COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

    Ínyan Iyé (Telling Rock)
    2019
    This installation uses embedded AI to speak and respond to viewers, upending assumptions about intelligence and agency. “People listen close, I whisper / The rock speaks beyond hearing … Many nations speaking / We speak to each other without words,” it intones, its lights shifting as viewers engage with its braided tendrils. The piece aims to convey what Kite calls “more-than-human intelligence”—systems rooted in reciprocity, the fundamental principle that all relationships involve mutual exchange and responsibility.

    COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

    Raven Chacon

    Voiceless Mass
    2021
    Raven Chacon’s Pulitzer Prize–winning musical composition Voiceless Mass premiered in 2021 at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Milwaukee. The piece generates what he calls “sounds the building can hear”—electronic frequencies that exploit the cathedral’s acoustics to create spectral voices without human vocal cords, a technological séance that gives presence to historical absence. Each site-specific performance is recorded, generating material that mirrors how sensor networks log presence—but only with explicit consent.

    COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

    Nicholas Galanin

    Aáni yéi xat duwasáakw (I am called Land)
    2025
    Galanin’s mechanical drum installation stages a conflict between machine motion and human memory, asking what happens when culture is performed without a consenting body. A box drum—an instrument historically carved from red cedar and hung with braided spruce root—is here made of cherrywood and suspended from the ceiling at the MassArt Art Museum in Boston as is traditionally done in Tlingit plank houses. Played at tribal meetings, celebrations, and ceremonies, these drums hold sonic memory as well as social function. A mechanical arm strikes, unfaltering, at the tempo of a heartbeat; like a warning, the sound pulses with the tension between automation and ancestry.–––

    COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

    I think it goes like this (pick yourself up)
    2025
    This Herculean bronze sculpture cast from deconstructed faux totem blocks serves to indict settler sabotage of Native technology and culture. Unlike today’s digital records—from genealogical databases to virtual versions of sacred texts like the Bible—Tlingit data is carved in wood. Galanin’s totem poles underscore their function as information systems, their carvings encoding history, mythology, and family.

    COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

    Petala Ironcloud is a California-born Lakota/Dakota and Jewish writer and textile artist based in New York.

    Artificial Indigenous intelligence knowledge meets
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleAnthropic has new rules for a more dangerous AI landscape
    Next Article Fortinet patches critical flaw with public exploit in FortiSIEM
    Techurz
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AI Systems

    The Future of AI Systems: 7 Architectural Shifts Driving the AI Revolution

    June 13, 2026
    Opinion

    EXCLUSIVE: Luma launches creative AI agents powered by its new ‘Unified Intelligence’ models

    March 5, 2026
    Opinion

    Israeli intelligence vets raise $20M to track developer buying signals

    October 28, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Latest Tech Pulse

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20252,289

    SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws major VC interest

    May 23, 202622

    Future of Digital Privacy and Security: 7 Truths Nobody Tells You

    May 25, 202619
    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • LinkedIn

    Techurz helps readers stay ahead of digital change with clear, practical, future focused technology intelligence written today,searched tomorrow.

    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Company
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Authors / Editorial Team
    • Write For Us
    • Advertise
    Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Cookie Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • DMCA
    Explore
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Future Tech
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    • Tech Pulse
    • Sitemap

    Join the Techurz Brief

    The future does not arrive suddenly.
    Stay ahead with fast, sharp tech signals.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.