Episodes

  • 39: Lawrence Lek—World Entry Points with Peter Bauman
    Jan 16 2026

    In this special podcast episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random’s editor in chief) speaks with artist and filmmaker Lawrence Lek about NOX Pavilion at The Bass Museum of Art in Miami, an immersive installation centered on a self-driving car in a “therapy” program for malfunctioning AIs.


    They unpack Lek’s long-running NOX universe: a speculative rehab center where care can slide into control, and where machine interiority is treated as a technical defect. The conversation moves from the politics of nonhuman rights and legal gray zones (“it depends”) to Lek’s recurring fascination with autonomous creative agency and what it would mean for an AI to make art as a choice that conflicts with its intended function.


    In the second half, Lek and Bauman widen the lens to world-building: why a world isn’t one thing but multiple entry points, how ideas like Umwelt and worldview shape what any intelligence can perceive, and why Lek increasingly thinks of his simulations as “superficial models”—interfaces to reality rather than claims to foundational truth.


    Monday’s Le Random Editorial: "Embodying AI at NeurIPS 2025: Creative AI Track" by Luba Elliott

    and "Ian Cheng on Composing with Systems" by Peter Bauman


    Chapters: 📖

    00:00:03 — Intro + Monday editorial highlights (NeurIPS / Luba Elliott)

    07:06:06 — From ecology to AI: nonhuman agency, rights, and “mature” discourse

    13:39:01 — Repairing AI interiority: Enigma’s “Revery” and malfunction-as-psychology

    19:58:05 — Legal personhood + Empty Rider: blame, responsibility, and the “it depends” machine

    27:35:09 — The crash test dummy: guide character, onboarding, and corporate voice

    32:11:06 — The empathy transition: why people resist empathizing with machines (for now)

    38:25:00 — Narratives vs “living code”: simulation stories and instantiated lifeforms

    44:21:06 — What counts as a world? Umwelt, worldview, and multiple entry points

    53:23:08 — Where immersive worlds may head: metaverse hangover, AI’s role, and formats shifting

    01:00:50 — Outro + goodbye

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • 38: 2025 Art in Review with thefunnyguys, Conrad House & Peter Bauman
    Dec 22 2025

    In this end-of-year episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random’s Editor-in-Chief) is joined by thefunnyguys (Le Random CEO) and Collection Lead Conrad House to look back on 2025: its biggest storylines, their favorites of the year and what they’re watching in 2026.


    They unpack a defining tension of the year: as crypto-native attention and prices stayed weak, institutional and traditional-art adoption of digital art kept accelerating. The conversation moves through platform and ecosystem shifts (VVV’s rise, Verse as gallery infrastructure, Art Blocks nearing the end of AB 500, Fxhash’s next chapter). Next is a discussion of “worlds”—protocol stacks getting richer, more modular, and increasingly entangled with AI, physical spaces and simulation.


    They close with Le Random highlights (including Raster and a more nimble publishing rhythm), personal favorites of the year, and a forward look at Node Foundation in Palo Alto, Canyon in New York, Colección Solo in Madrid, and Zero 10’s next iteration in Hong Kong.


    Mentioned:

    1. "Ian Goodfellow on Inventing GANs"
    2. "THE PEOPLE ARE IN THE COMPUTER—PART I" on Alec Radford (most popular piece of 2025)
    3. "The Ultraintelligent Machine and Gaberbocchus Common Room" by Jasia Reichardt and Our 100th article
    4. "Drifella III: Room for Complexity" - 4,000+ word deep dive on Evil Biscuit's classic
    5. "Parker Ito and Evil Biscuit on Possessed Spirits"
    6. "Standout Artwork of 2025"


    Chapters 📖:

    00:00 Intro + agenda


    01:29 Big takeaway: digital art’s institutionalization


    04:23 NFTs fade in crypto, rise in trad art (two camps)


    07:12 Capitulation vs institutional growth (NFT categories)


    09:53 Macro check: S&P vs ETH/BTC/XTZ


    13:30 What brings collectors back? (liquidity + catalysts)


    23:08 Fairs & infra: Art Basel, minting tech, new spaces


    26:00 Platforms reposition: Art Blocks + fxhash


    30:08 “Worlds” as the frame (protocol stacks + world models)


    42:07 AI art maturity: from hype to diffusion


    44:23 Le Random focus: Raster + collecting strategy


    49:30 Q4 editorial shift: Friday pods + agility


    50:45 Favorites of 2025: kickoff


    50:56 Favorite group shows


    58:56 Favorite releases: Claude/Gemini/Marble → vibe coding


    1:07:54 Favorite solo works


    1:17:46 Favorite artist picks


    1:27:23 Looking ahead to 2026


    1:38:11 Outro

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    1 hr and 38 mins
  • 37: terra0—What the "(Autonomous) Forest" Wants with Peter Bauman
    Dec 19 2025

    In this special episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random's editor in chief) speaks with Paul Seidler and Paul Kolling from art collective terra0 about their project Autonomous Forest (2025)⁠. They cover the nearly decade-long journey from ⁠white paper (2016)⁠ as university students to the project's NFT launch in December 2025.


    The collective shares how the original idea in the white paper mutated with projects like Flowertokens, Premna Deamon and now Autonomous Forest.


    They also cover why working through German law and smart contracts creates better frameworks than pure speculation, how the project evolved from startup pitches to nonprofit governance, and what it means to build living systems that exist outside economic (and human) exploitation.



    Monday's Le Random Editorial on "Standout Artwork of 2025"



    Thursday's Le Random Editorial: "Zero 10 Part 1: Beeple Casts a Spell" by Kevin Buist



    Chapters: 📖


    00:00:00 Intro: terra0 + “Autonomous Forest” (what it is)


    00:10:01 The long arc: Flower Tokens, Premna Daemon, and the road to Autonomous Forest


    00:17:02 The pivot: from “forest as economic agent” to removing ecosystems from the market


    00:22:00 Why blockchain matters: voting, trust, governance, and accountability


    00:26:03 Repeatability + policy experiment vibes — and where AI fits (and doesn’t)


    00:29:01 Legal fictions: “corporations as slow AIs” and the problem of intention

    00:32:04 Personhood for nature: who can speak for rivers/forests/nonhuman interests?


    00:38:04 Protocol art roots: relational aesthetics, software art, and law as medium


    00:41:01 World-building + generative art lineage (instructions → systems → protocols)


    00:49:00 Guattari’s “Three Ecologies,” land art links, and closing reflections

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    54 mins
  • 36: Stephanie Dinkins—AI, Memory & Survival with Peter Bauman
    Dec 12 2025

    In this episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random’s editor in chief) speaks with transdisciplinary artist Stephanie Dinkins about AI as a container for preserving oral history, tradition, and the kinds of community knowledge that rarely make it onto the internet.


    Dinkins shares how a chance encounter with Bina48 in 2014 reshaped her practice. They discuss how this connects to her push for small, community-driven data that protects nuance and self-definition, especially for Black and Brown communities, against the homogenizing pull of large corporate models.


    They also cover Not the Only One as a “living archive” of family memory, the politics of access, privacy, and consent, and why Dinkins treats imagination (and hyperstition) as a practical method for building the AI futures we actually want.


    Monday's editorial (Beeple on Robot Dogs as Canvas): https://www.lerandom.art/editorial/beeple-on-robot-dogs-as-canvas



    Chapters 📖:
    [00:00:03]: Intro: Le Random podcast, Beeple, Stephanie Dinkins


    [00:03:40]: Play, exploration, and academic freedom


    [00:07:02]: Meeting Bina48 changes everything


    [00:12:31]: Small data versus homogenizing big data


    [00:18:35]: Worldbuilding, autonomy, and Not The Only One


    [00:24:57]: Using AI to preserve family ethos


    [00:31:53]: Prompting against algorithmic whitening


    [00:39:05]: Beyond fear: engagement and agency


    [00:45:42]: Students’ use, negotiation, and deep work


    [00:50:27]: Surfing change and lifelong learning

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    53 mins
  • 35: Beeple—Robot Dogs & Art After the Alien Landing with Peter Bauman
    Dec 1 2025

    In this very special episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random's editor in chief) speaks with artist Beeple (Mike Winkelmann) about a busy year of institutional shows, studio experiments, and what it means for digital art to edge closer to the canon.


    The artist traces how works like Human One, Diffuse Control, and Transient Bloom at institutions like LACMA, The Shed, Mori Art Museum and Toledo Museum of Art have shifted his sense of digital art’s inevitability. They also discuss why he thinks IRL encounters with screens, robots and installations are “higher fidelity” than years of online discourse. They then cover how his Charleston studio has become a public lab by hosting CryptoPunks nights, video game tournaments, and a Synthetic Theater event.


    The second part of the conversation mostly covers REGULAR ANIMALS, Beeple's robotic, AI-mediated dog pack for Art Basel’s new Zero 10 digital section. They look at the work as a prototype for long-form generative systems that sense and interpret the world in real time, plus much more!


    A written version of the conversation now available on our Editorials: https://www.lerandom.art/editorial/beeple-on-robot-dogs-as-canvas


    Chapters 📖:

    [00:00:04]: Introduction and context

    [00:01:47]: Year in review and institutional milestones

    [00:03:11]: Embracing digital art as its own medium

    [00:06:19]: Studio as public outreach platform

    [00:10:05]: IRL experiences versus online discourse

    [00:11:28]: Market vibes versus institutional progress

    [00:15:37]: Conceiving the Art Basel presentation

    [00:19:58]: Rethinking generative art with new systems

    [00:23:16]: Running the studio like a gallery

    [00:27:37]: Robots as living, intelligent sculptures

    [00:31:29]: Are technologists artists and curators?

    [00:33:50]: Why we are not prepared for the future

    [00:39:30]: Nuance of AI within artworks

    [00:41:30]: Human intention amid AI-assisted processes

    [00:45:02]: Closing thanks and sign-off

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    45 mins
  • 34: Anna Ridler & Sofia Crespo—The Natural History of Machine Learning with Peter Bauman (Deep Learning Series 03)
    Nov 28 2025

    In this episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random's editor in chief) speaks with pioneering artist duo Anna Ridler and Sofia Crespo about their long-running collaboration bringing machine learning into dialogue with natural history.


    They trace their early encounters with deep learning—from memes, browser histories, and speech-to-text to data visualization, encyclopedias, and NeurIPS Creativity Workshops—and how both arrived at AI through questions of classification and what it means to “understand” the world.


    They also discuss fusing natural history and machine learning across their five collaborative projects (including Anna Atkins–inspired cyanotypes, Argentine “artificial memories” and the rain-marked Clematis tiles), working only with their own datasets in the middle of AI copyright debates, rethinking collage and photography in an era of generative models, and what might come next after winning Arab Bank Switzerland’s Artist of the Year prize.


    Monday's Editorial:

    Holly Herndon & Mat Dryhurst on Artificial Psychedelia: https://www.lerandom.art/editorial/holly-herndon-mat-dryhurst-on-artificial-psychedelia


    Chapters 📖:

    [00:00:03]: Introduction and episode overview


    [00:02:23]: Anna’s path to deep learning


    [00:03:32]: Sofia’s early AI explorations


    [00:07:36]: Natural history and machine learning parallels


    [00:10:30]: Posthuman ideas emerging in practice


    [00:12:34]: NeurIPS Creativity Workshop beginnings


    [00:13:34]: Artist versus technologist mindset


    [00:15:44]: Sofia’s nontraditional art journey


    [00:21:01]: Speaking to researchers during COVID


    [00:22:05]: Meeting and first encounters


    [00:26:11]: First Collaboration: Various and Casual Occursions


    [00:34:52]: Second project: 83 Seeds from a Vanishing Mountain


    [00:38:06]: Third project: Snapshots: Orchids


    [00:42:46]: Fourth project: Long Short Term Memories


    [00:47:15]: Fifth project: 3.31424e+126 : clematis armandii


    [00:52:05]: Looking ahead together


    [00:53:41]: Closing thanks and goodbyes

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    54 mins
  • 33: Dr Mimi Nguyen—Disruptive Innovation in Contemporary Art with Peter Bauman
    Nov 21 2025

    In this episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random's editor in chief) speaks with one of the most impactful forces in contemporary art, gallerist and curator Dr. Mimi Nguyen.


    They discuss Nguyen's path from statistics and design engineering into art and NFTs, opening galleries in London and New York, and a whirlwind year across Paris Photo, Art Basel Miami Beach’s new Zero 10 digital section, and the global fair circuit.


    They also cover the gap between crypto prices and on-the-ground energy, liquidity and taste, museums as signals, the technical realities of showing digital art, and what sustainable, future-ready gallery models might look like.


    Monday's Editorial with Karl Sims & Alexander Mordvintsev: https://www.lerandom.art/editorial/karl-sims-alexander-mordvintsev-on-merging-technology-and-biology


    Chapters 📖:

    [00:00:03]: Introduction and episode context

    [00:01:40]: Mimi’s background and career pivot question

    [00:06:11]: Sentiment versus reality in digital art

    [00:10:19]: Bridging to traditional art; audience and taste[

    00:10:35]: Sustainability of the current ecosystem

    [00:14:03]: Economic realities and institutions’ signaling role

    [00:15:11]: Big year recap and name pronunciation

    [00:16:50]: Lessons from a busy year; longer shows

    [00:21:30]: Plans and selectivity for next year

    [00:21:52]: Role of the gallery and collector relationships

    [00:23:00]: Technical realities of presenting digital art

    [00:27:30]: Adapting to new tech and outreach lessons

    [00:30:30]: Curating and choosing artists to represent

    [00:32:55]: Digital energy versus traditional market downturn

    [00:33:57]: Rethinking gallery models and cost structures

    [00:37:14]: Closing thanks and farewell

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    38 mins
  • 32: Maya Man & Ann Hirsch—Ironic Sincerity and Online Gender Performativity Extremes with Peter Bauman
    Nov 14 2025

    In this long-anticipated episode, host Peter Bauman (Le Random's editor in chief) speaks with one of the most exciting duos in contemporary digital culture, Ann Hirsch and Maya Man. They cover their collaborative projects, Ugly Bitches and Little Darlings, which explore online gender performativity.

    We discuss the works in relation to the so-called "vibe shift" of the 2020s. The artists also discuss how their work, often using GANs and other AI technologies, counteracts the "girl boss" rhetoric of early 2020s NFT projects by presenting a more flawed, nuanced, and sincere depiction of both femininity and masculinity.

    They detail how UB uses intentionally distorted AI dolls to comment on female failure, while LD employs shinier AI imagery to critique the "hustle grind gain success" male influencer culture. Finally, the conversation touches upon their admiration for, and points of departure from, the "Gay NFT" or Avant Schizocollage scene, with the artists expressing an interest in "ironic sincerity" in their work.


    Monday's Editorial with Jess Tucker: https://www.lerandom.art/editorial/jess-tucker-on-longing-for-a-face


    Chapters 📖:

    [00:00:03]: Intro and episode overview

    [00:01:48]: How Ann and Maya met

    [00:01:57]: Ugly Bitches spark and concept

    [00:02:43]: Overlapping interests and prior work

    [00:04:37]: Critique of women-centric NFT projects

    [00:06:08]: Realism over idealization[00:06:56]: Vibe shift and gender extremes online

    [00:18:03]: Problem with “all women are beautiful”[00:19:32]: Training GANs and diffusion for concepts

    [00:25:12]: On the Solana “gay NFT” scene[00:30:37]: Code versus curation; hashlips pipelines

    [00:31:35]: Software choices: canvas, DOM, possibilities[00:33:24]: Sincerity versus irony in online scenes

    [00:34:34]: Heart: earnest, feminine internet culture

    [00:37:27]: Annie and ironic sincerity[00:41:17]: Parallels, coming-of-age, and what’s next

    [00:42:49]: Expanding the Ugly Bitches universe

    [00:43:36]: Maya’s StarQuest: dance, AI, autobiography

    [00:47:06]: Hints at darker future work

    [00:47:12]: Closing thanks and future reunion[00:48:25]: Final goodbye

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    49 mins