This vision of Philadelphia suggests guns will make the city worse before it can get better. Portlock was inspired by Australia, which in 1996 passed strict gun laws after a catastrophic shooting on the island of Tasmania left 35 people dead. Since those laws were passed, homicides and suicides by gun have reduced by about half, although a downward trend had begun prior to 1996.
Portlocks’ “Time After the Hunter” depicts a city both in ruin and reborn.
“In the piece there are remnants of the past version of the city with guns when this event took place,” he said. “Then there’s the new version of the city that came after that.”
Natalie Hijinx, a Philadelphia artist and member of the collective Vox Populi, dipped into her love of science fiction and Gene Roddenberry (“Star Trek”) to create “Long Action,” a multimedia sculptural piece set in a future dominated by a decentralized artificial intelligence.
But instead of destroying humanity in a technological dystopia, this benign AI devotes itself to rescuing mankind from itself. Called the Essensees, the collective intelligence engineers a super fungus that feeds on gunpowder, quickly rendering the world’s guns useless.