Brooklyn’s Greenpoint neighborhood is sitting in a new type of “luxury” partner living between a elementary school and a public library.
Named by the Chat House, there are many elements in the place you meet at the traditional fellow worker office: People are putting hammers on their computer keyboards, another person makes a phone call, someone else has stopped to take coffee through his computer.
However, there is an important difference: Chat House is a partner’s place for AI Chat Boats, and everything – including people – is made of cardboard.
Specifically, the Chat House is an art exposure of the Brooklyn Artist Moist. It has a handful of cardboard robots that work on their computers through small motors controlled by controlled movements. There is a gesture that offers a desk space only a month for $ 1,999 and the other that labels this place as “Luxury Co -Working Place for Chat Boats”.
Ben-Rivine told Tech Crunch that he made the exhibition and made humor as it is mostly pushed into the world of AI. He added that he was already denying free jobs as companies turn to AI tools instead.

“It was like an expression of frustration in humor, so I would not be too bitter about changing the industry so quickly and under my nose and didn’t want to be part of this shift,” said Ben-Rewan. “So I was like that, I would just fight with a fool that I could laugh myself.”
He said he too wanted to stop the exhibition from being very negative because he did not think he would tell the right message. He said that creating art, which is clearly negative, compels it in a corner and needs to defend itself. He added that giving the display “light tone” helps him with all the opinions of all ages and all opinions on AI.
When I and Ben were chatting at a Pan Pan Pan Venu Venu, a cafe pan across the road from the window display, several groups of people stopped to see the Chat House. Women of the 3,000 -year -old stopped and took pictures. A group of early -age students outside school stopped and asked their adult colleagues.
Ben Raven also thought that despite what AI was doing with the industry, the situation was much lighter than other horrors and trauma that took place in the world today.
He said, “I mean, in terms of the creative world, it looks like a light thing in comparison to many others, such as war, things in the world and terror and trauma that exists.”
Ben Raven has always used cardboard in his art. He built the airport’s terminal’s terminal’s Lifice Republics in grade school. Over the past decade, between freelance jobs, he has worked on the construction of these cardboard robots, or “cardboard children” when they call them. So using these cardboard robots was a natural choice for display – he jokingly said he also needed a reason to get out of his apartment – this content is also providing another comment on AI.
“The volatility of this cardboard items, and the ability to eliminate it under just a little weight, I feel that the AI is interacting with the creative industries,” he said. “People can make pictures of their mid -madjrani that are really very good on Instagram and children of 12 years of age do not get to some extent, but with any level of scrutiny, this is garbage, and I feel like you are looking closely enough, they will be easily weighted and easily weighed.”
Although he understands why consumers are attracted to some AI inflatory art. He described it as a junk food and a high -speed acting serotonin hit, which comes from eating junk food quickly before digestion.
The Chat House is a temporary display because the building that has a permit for approval of its renovation. Ben-Raven hopes to maintain the display by at least mid-May and if he can do it is expected to move to a larger gallery. He wants to be able to increase it – but is worried about where he will put any additional content in his apartment after the display is over.
Ben Raven said, “I just thought it would be funny to show this idea, such as any kind of lovely, weird, baby robots type in a warehouse because of our chatter, nor do they work like electricity like Switzerland in any year.”
The Chat House is currently in the Greenpoint neighborhood of New York to display in the window in front of 121 Norman Avenue in Brooklyn.