"We are out of tokens" names a technical limit and a human condition.

EXHIBITION THESIS

We are living through the implosion. Not the slow arc of technological change that previous generations experienced, but a compression of time so violent that last month's breakthrough is this month's obsolescence. Every week a new model. Every day a new capability. Every hour the ground shifts. We are the generation chosen by circumstance to witness the threshold, and if we do not document it with the urgency it demands, future historians will have only the corporate press releases and the benchmark scores. They will not know what it felt like.

 

"We are out of tokens" names a technical limit and a human condition. In machine systems, it signals a full context window, a boundary beyond which information can no longer be held in working memory. It is a condition we share. We are all out of tokens. Our attention is exhausted. Our capacity for absorbing change is maxed out. And yet the change continues.

 

This exhibition presents ten new paintings that extend Fyder's established practice of recontextualization, direct address, and appropriated language into the domain of artificial intelligence. Rather than illustrating technology, the works treat its vernacular as cultural material: prompts, parameters, metrics, logs. The works create new imagery and new meaning for the defining technological rupture of our time. The works do not position the viewer as a passive observer. They implicate the viewer as a user. Contemporary AI systems are not merely consumed; they are addressed.

 

We request, prompt, adjust, and refine.

 

Each interaction leaves a trace. Desire is shaped by output. Identity accrues through inputs. The exhibition stages this feedback loop and makes its structure visible.

 

The paintings insist on the irreducible presence of the human hand—slowness, friction, material commitment—applied to language designed for speed, efficiency, and optimization. What is painted here is not the machine itself, but the psychological and linguistic environment it produces.

 

STATEMENT

The emergence of machine-generated language is not a speculative future. It is a lived condition shaping how people think, work, and articulate themselves. Its most significant effects are not visual but linguistic and psychological. The way we phrase requests. The way we anticipate responses. The way we adjust ourselves to be understood by systems trained on our previous adjustments.

 

WE ARE OUT OF TOKENS does not position itself as commentary from outside this transformation. It operates from within it. The works document a moment before these conditions become invisible through familiarity, before interface language feels natural, before asking machines questions no longer feels strange.

 

If we do not make these records now, no one will. The corporate press releases will survive. The benchmark scores will be archived. But the feeling of this threshold—what it was like to be a human who still remembered when machines could not speak—will be lost. That feeling is what these paintings attempt to hold.

 

I am hell-bent on this. Full of ideas, sleepless with urgency. This is the work I will be doing until my last breath, because someone has to stand at this juncture and say: I was here, it felt like this, and I made these marks before the context window closed.