Abstract
This paper reinterprets the robotic installation Sisyphus as a generative choreography of conflict rather than a parable of futile labor. Six small autonomous “Constructors” repeatedly assemble brick arches while a powerful industrial “Destructor” sweeps them down, creating an unending loop of construction and erasure. Drawing on Deleuze’s Difference and Repetition, this paper distinguishes bare repetition—negation that restores identity—from complex repetition, which produces novelty. I argue that the loop “selects” for creation in a Nietzschean-Deleuzian sense of Eternal Return: what returns is difference, not the same. Reading the work as an abstract machine links its material system (robots, sensing, bricks, control) to conceptual expression (myth, resistance, becoming). To avoid anthropomorphism, this article analyzes the installation’s percepts of persistence and affects of struggle, clarifying affect as pre-personal intensity. This paper situates Sisyphus historically between solitary robotic pathos and harmonious ensembles, and alongside traditions of mechanized conflict from Tinguely to SRL, while showing how Chan’s work transforms destruction into a programmatic, ongoing method. This paper proposes “dialectical robotics” to name this multi-agent antagonism and shows how it models resilience in decentralized networks. The piece thus offers media-aesthetic and political insight: sustained opposition can catalyze adaptation, recoding repetition as a source of difference in art, technology, and social life.
| Original language | English |
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| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Leonardo |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 24 Dec 2025 |
User-Defined Keywords
- robotic art
- media art
- Deleuze
- conflict
- resistance
- repetition
- social movements