School of Art & Design

zoom image of a city

Pausing AI development will give our governments and culture time to catch up with and steer the rush of new technology.

Geelong art gallery

Bold cultural visions can be useful for society and give certainty to the arts sector, says UNSW cultural data expert.  

men at kens karate klub kensington in 1977 – William Yang

Sydneyphiles remounts Yang’s 1977 exhibition, documenting mainstream Sydney and the illegal gay party scene.

The A&D Annual 2022 exhibition is a showcase of critical thinking and is on now.

‘Théâtre D’opéra Spatial’ Jason Allen

AI art tools like DALL-E, Midjourney and Stable Diffusion are starting a revolution in the way art is made.

a small  rope woven sheath hangs against a fabric wall

Descendants of the Bidjara, Ghungalu and Garingbal peoples, two renowned artists come together in this family exhibition.

ifire concept

A new AI-driven immersive visualisation system will help us address the new generation of extreme fires caused by global warming.

Installation view of the generous water giant

The aesthetically captivating 23rd edition of the biennale shows how art can contribute to debates around environmental sustainability.

A social robot, left, dressed in a blouse and cardigan looks at a researcher, right.

Do robots need a gender? Professor Mari Velonaki of UNSW's Creative Robotics Lab says robots still have male and female stereotypes, but this may change as designers respond to new thinking on gender.

human and robotic hand typing on a keyboard

A text-generator designed by a UNSW PhD researcher harnesses artificial intelligence to generate creative short stories.

Pages