Rotterdam –Het Nieuwe Instituut's latest exhibition explores the ethical implications of using technology for self-improvement.
In this age of technology, optimising our bodies has become easier than ever before. Women are freezing their eggs in order to postpone motherhood and consumers are using DNA testing to create personalised beauty products.
The Life Fair interrogates this world of optimisation through a faux trade fair of both real and speculative products and services. Displayed around the themes of birth, work, sex, security and health, the exhibition reveals what it means for people to give companies access to their bodies (through data, for instance) in order to optimise them.
‘The Life Fair presents products and services from companies, governments and organisations that have an influence on our bodies and our lives,’ explains Giovanni Innella, co-curator of the exhibition. ‘We didn’t simply want to exhibit projects. We also wanted to make visitors aware of the fact that there are companies, governments or NGOs behind these products and services that are not always immediately apparent.’
Along this quest for the Optimised Self, consumers and brands must consider their relationship with each other and how optimisation can quickly lead to commodification.