Silence and Void: Toward an Aesthetics of Metrics

Silence and void are often reductively understood as negative conditions: the absence of sound in one case, the absence of matter in the other. This interpretation assigns both a derivative status, as if they were merely limiting cases or abstract containers, presumed to receive what they themselves exclude. Such a view, while intuitively appealing, is conceptually inadequate. It assumes that absence is primary and presence secondary, that what is measurable or perceptible must emerge against a neutral, inert background. A more careful analysis suggests the opposite: silence and void are not empty stages awaiting occupation, but richly structured, metrically defined conditions that are already fully actual.

Consider, first, the notion of space. In everyday reasoning, one is inclined to assert that space becomes evident only through the presence of a body. Without objects, space would seem to recede into abstraction. Yet this formulation already contains an implicit assumption: that space exists independently as a receptacle, a locus of potential occupation. This is precisely the assumption that modern physics has progressively dismantled. Space is not a passive container that becomes “filled” when matter appears; nor does it possess Continue reading “Silence and Void: Toward an Aesthetics of Metrics”

Field Notes (from an Invisible Crossing)

Ink against ink: only pressure, only residue that condenses. Like charged particles crossing a chamber of supersaturated air, signs precipitate in a supersaturated language. Trails—sentences—appear only where a blank equilibrium has been disturbed, leaving the trace of an event. The work does not present itself; it exposes only the conditions of its own existence.

Instructions without Manual

This talk, given at the Cambridge Creation Lab, unfolds as a sustained inquiry into numbers, signs, and memory, approaching computation, notation, and writing as generative rather than instrumental media. Moving between algebra, asemic writing, physics, and typographic practice, Federici reframes numbers as aesthetic entities, silence as a relational medium, and writing as an experimental apparatus—where data, symbols, and material traces converge into living systems of sense.

White Noise, errata | signal loss | unwritten | data, year 2, volume 2, 01/2026 | buy on amazon

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Authorship as Spectral Reduction

All that remains to be done is to play with the pieces. Playing with the pieces—that is postmodern. [Jean Baudrillard, Interview: Game with Vestiges, On the Beach, no. 5 (Winter 1984): 24.]


I.

Faced with generative models, the idea of a structuring self appears increasingly inadequate. Instead, a dispersive principle emerges: the self does not retain the sign or signal to process it, but decomposes its field of possibilities.
This is not a mere loss of subjectivity, but a shift in function. The decomposition of the message acquires relational value. Writing aligns with the structures of the networks it engages with, without these assuming the role of superior instances. There is no central point absorbing and reorganizing, but a network of connections in which overall order prevails over individual identities. As in a lattice, it is the relations that determine the system’s properties.
From this perspective, the proliferation of artificial entities capable of acting beyond mere imitation may reshape power dynamics, reducing the human to a minimal but functional presence. Human and machine, still perceived as opposed terms, follow convergent trajectories.
In literature, this translates into practices of textual recomposition that do not aim to restore lost authorship but operate within a condition of dispersion. Here, practices such as found poetry and sought poetry are renewed.
In found poetry, the author explored a space in search of a potential text. The gesture resembled restoration more than production: gaps could be filled or left active as structural elements. In sought poetry, the search was mediated by an algorithm, authored or adopted by the writer, used as a selection device.
In both cases, authorship shifted toward method, operating within a framework oriented toward a probable, though not fully determined, outcome.
The use of artificial networks introduces further variables, multiplying modes of encounter with the text. The apparent organicity of inference processes conceals zones of opacity and recursion, bypassable through the controlled introduction of noise in the triggering conditions. In this space, linguistic and mathematical metrics come into relation.
Whether the author acts as filter or detection point, their position has shifted: no longer external to the work, but internal to a genuinely experimental process. Investigation thus oscillates between two poles: a possible synthesis and the detection of a minimal signal.
As Baudrillard suggests, it is in these modes of play that the conditions of writing are redefined today. In dialogue with artificial intelligences—not opposed to the human, not biological—the text ceases to be the product of an individual will and manifests as an open system.



II.

Authorship no longer coincides with the production of sign or signal, but with the definition of a principle of triggering and selection. AI generates a linguistic continuum in which units of sense overlap and interfere; the author intervenes by setting operational thresholds.
Reading functions as a process of discrimination. Machine-generated material points to a plurality of interpretations, which the author filters, intensifies, or attenuates through indirect interventions that do not integrate directly into the work, but guide its emergence. Variants do not constitute narrative alternatives, but modulations.
Selective textual perception takes shape through the interplay between what can be said and what is read. AI provides a diffuse, unstable linguistic output, within which the author focuses on elements that tend to differentiate without stabilizing.
In terms of signal theory, AI can be understood as a generator of structured noise, where the noise itself conveys information. Analysing this output allows dominant components and deviations to be distinguished, establishing the contours of the work. Meaning does not precede the operation: it is its outcome.
Authorship thus defines itself as spectral reduction: a provisional arrest of dispersion that renders, for a given time, a single frequency legible among many.
The relationship between author and AI does not take the form of antagonism, but of operational interaction. AI expands the domain of the possible; the author delimits the present. The emergent work is not transmission, but a pattern of refracted-recompositions within the network.

White Noise, errata | signal loss | unwritten | data, year 2, volume 2, 01/2026 | buy on amazon

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White Noise n.2

not-quite-archive of errata | signal loss | unwritten | data

co/ordinates : misreading asemic writing as kitsch: scientific forms and structural depth; ten olivetti tables; first study about farfalla; first study across silence; warten auf god; rooks, knights (and other probabilities); negotiating authorship in the age of AI; [ controlled ] generative drift; two letter excerpts (and a recast); cracking the algorithm; being an event; authorship as spectral reduction; stanzas I-III; consciousness as a state of language; hypothesis on a practice of operative writing; short abstract in computational algebra; instructions without a manual; translanguaging in asemic writing: a metric space approach

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The Author-as-Director

Émile Zharan, N.A.S.T.R.O., edited by Federico Federici, English | Italian edition. Also available on Lulu.

If writing may arise from a subjectivity negotiating with the machine, in Federici it takes shape precisely where subjectivity withdraws. N.A.S.T.R.O. is signed under an alias chosen by the artificial intelligence itself. The author does not merely interrogate a model; he duplicates himself within it, allows himself to be translated and to return. There is no post-editing, except in the form of further instructions. The text is accepted in its emergence and guided upstream by the design of the prompts, as if the direction preceded the set and the film edited itself.
The result—prose, dialogues, interviews, non-linear narratives, asemic pages, and theoretical passages in which the model itself reflects on what it has produced—does not attempt to mask its origin, but openly declares that here a trained and supervised network is writing, capable of “writing as if it had something to say.” It is precisely in the as if condition that the entire dispositif resides. The “human” certification obtained from detection software does not establish an identity; it is evidence of this implicit contract: the network imitates the human to the point of becoming such; the author, in return, accepts that the machine signs the text.
What, then, happens to authorship? What happens is precisely what the book itself theorizes, starting from Duchamp. No longer the artist who defines the work after having set it into circulation, but the prompt as a generative act. Not “this is mine,” but “this happens because I asked in this way.”
And the image of Tiresias says the rest: the doubled author, human and algorithmic, seer and blind, an embodied threshold between writing of intention and generative flow. Not an “I” that expresses, but a distributed director who sets conditions, listens, reformulates. Hence the insistence on multi-authorship: not visible collaboration, but the network as an archive in perpetual becoming, where every word becomes data, every style a pattern, and where no one can truly say who wrote a sentence, because every sentence is an intersection of memories—human and non-human—stored in data centers.
It is no coincidence that, being the result of a combination suggested by the AI of Zola and Cioran, Émile Zharan himself—like Tiresias—is double. He is one, no one, and one hundred thousand.
Although Federici does not withdraw from technique, neither does he fetishize it. In this authorial schizophrenia, the role of the human being remains central.
The machine is indeed regarded as an “algorithmic oracle” to be followed, but also to be explored and guided toward zones of linguistic interest. All this with the awareness that the parameters by which the network orients itself are numerical, while those by which the human guides it are linguistic. The task is to transform the quality of an idea into a treatable quantity (an automatic process), and then to ascend again from quantity to a form that holds—and above all, that makes sense.
Along this path, error is what pulls the text away from pure recombination: openings of possible meaning emerge where the machine fails its task and slips, repeats, errs. There the writer does not correct, but insists. There writing does not close; it expands. There the author-as-director recomposes himself from his parts—and composes.
Starting from instructions such as “no capitals, no punctuation,” Federici establishes a degree zero that forces the sentence to stand on its own, without crutches. The prompt thus becomes his calligraphy: deciding how—no less than what—to ask is already deciding the stroke, holding the pen at the edge of the page. For Federici, the machine is not a simple compositional aid; it is a metric space (and here the ghost of Amelia Rosselli resonates). AI is not merely a writing tool—like a keyboard (hardware) or a program (software)—but a true space of measure and distribution, a place in which language is laid out, calibrated, distributed by density, a “field of forces” within which writing occurs.
Within this space, the book seems to proceed by gradually offering latitude and longitude.
The apocryphal quotations at the beginning and end appear to establish that, within these coordinates, writing no longer represents but simulates. Even the “true research writer” never knows whether he is “a writer or merely a caption.”
N.A.S.T.R.O. moves from evoking an ironic, everyday imagery worthy of Nanni Moretti’s Ecce Bombo, to a more oneiric, languid, radioactive atmosphere echoing Tarkovsky’s Stalker; to recreating the paradoxical, absurd, and grotesque Kafkaesque; also traversing a dramatic and delicate subplot centered on a young girl.
Only after these simulative trials, and after having literally offered its coordinates, can the text fragment and the word lose its meaning to become pure abstract sign. The asemic pages display the evidence of an inhuman gesture, perfect—too perfect—for its original idea of imperfection. Here the reference is John Cage: producing noise, exposing the non-signifying ground that allows the signifier not to impose itself as the sole path. The page fills with symbols six times, then returns to prose with the obsessive repetition of “it means,” a partial arrest of communication that asks the reader to become pure attention, to accept that reading is not a passive task if one is willing not to know. Only in this way can repetition and automatization be acknowledged, welcomed, accepted.
The “ten writings,” the minimal screenplays, the low-definition images, the first-person drifts, the objects that become protagonists all show that writing can also arise from an author who is simply a pilot, the one who selects the right route to follow.
Thus, N.A.S.T.R.O. does not demonstrate that AI can write in place of the author. Rather, it shows the transformation of the author’s form and role: a director who guides, listens, interrogates the oracle–mechanical actor, seducing the network and leading it to the points where language gains meaning or loses it—and from that loss draws a form or a sense.

The Post-Author?

Federici shows that writing today means moving within a shared language, providing words with the right coordinates to orient them within an algorithmic training path that leads them toward the sentence or the verse.
N.A.S.T.R.O. does not merely recount what artificial intelligence can do with language; it shows what the author can still be. No longer simply the origin or guarantor of meaning, but a liminal figure, a presence working at the edge; guardian of a passage, mediator of a dialogue between two different languages. The text is no longer a possessed territory, but a field to be traversed. And in that field, the author withdraws, splits, multiplies, while remaining himself.
Federici probes the possibility of an author who exists solely as a director of instructions and who leaves his machine-actor full freedom in performance.
The myth of creative individuality is suspended to see what remains afterward. And what remains is no longer “saying something,” but rather “making language happen” through the double gesture of caring and directing.
AI is neither a simple tool to be used nor an adversary to be overcome; it is the domain in which the human can still interrogate his own language, offering it to the machine that dismantles and reconstructs it, in order to ask what remains of oneself when intention is shared, when the voice is distributed.
For this reason, the author is not a dead figure, but a transformed one—digital, godmother, director…—and still in transformation, a figure on the verge of becoming post.
The post-author is the one who understands that writing is no longer “saying something in one’s own words,” but allowing the word to find, even through an algorithm, a new form of presence.
The post-author is the one who knows where to stop, how to modulate, how to let language occur.
The post-author is the one who accepts remaining in the middle, in suspension between human and machine, knowing that every sentence is the result of a coexistence and a risk.
The post-author is the one who feels the warmth of a hybrid contact: no longer exclusively between a hand and a pen, no longer simply between fingers and a keyboard, but already between his imprint and that which many others like him leave in digital space.
From this contact inevitably arises a double contract. […]
Perhaps this is the new threshold today. Writing that departs from us and returns to us from elsewhere—modified and modifiable, expanded and expandable—and reminds us that delicacy is still possible, even within a language that is no longer solely ours.
Perhaps, more than a new figure, the post-author is a condition. Not the one who comes after, but the one who traverses the end of traditional authorship without seeking to restore it. Not the one who surrenders to the machine, but the one who remains open to encountering it.
And who knows—perhaps in the future, from this encounter, we will come to understand that we, too, are machines. (Federici is convinced of it.)

Nicola Delvecchio

Hypothesis on a Practice of Operative Writing





«Nature is never finished.»
Robert Smithson



Liner Notes for a Pithecanthropus Erectus Sketchbook and Unmastered Bones form a sequence of successive elaborations that does not follow a logic of refinement, but unfolds as a process of material and procedural reformulation.
The work begins with a bundle of sheets marked by sparse and disorganised writing, representing a first attempt to structure the textual and semiotic material. This phase is followed by Liner Notes, in the version with Steven J. Fowler’s note, and then by Unmastered Bones, created specifically for the Salerno exhibition.
Unmastered Bones is based on the reproduction of Liner Notes through a laser printer with exhausted toner and a ribbed roller, applied to flood-damaged sheets sourced from the paper mill referenced in the work’s notes. Using a deliberately compromised printing device introduces systematic variations in the transfer process: the machine, designed to guarantee exact correspondence between file and output, becomes the first agent of alteration. Reproduction thus becomes an autonomous compositional phase, shaped by the physical and mechanical properties of the medium.
This step reconfigures the relationship between author and technical device—not in terms of control or failure, but as an articulation of an operational chain. The mechanical intervention is neither corrective nor accidental, but structural. The choice of flood-damaged sheets as support for an asemic score reinforces this approach: the paper, marked by exposure and deterioration, resists stabilization and points to an open working method, akin to Charles Mingus’s compositional practice, where the score serves as a transformable base rather than a fixed prescription.
On the copies produced through this printing process, texts, washes of ink, and abrasions are subsequently layered. These interventions do not aim to restore compromised legibility, but to engage with the preexisting alterations, intensifying the density of the asemic sign. The work proceeds from materials that are themselves the product of prior phases, configuring a practice of re-elaboration on existing artefacts.
In this sense, Liner Notes and Unmastered Bones are not comparable as alternative versions of the same object, nor formally superimposable. Their relation is closer to that of different performances of a single suite: a recognisable structure persists, a common reference plane remains, yet each realisation introduces specific deviations determined by operational conditions and the gestures that traverse it.
The process is not intended as conclusive. Layering, removal, and displacement remain potentially reiterable, making each stage of the work available as a basis for further interventions. From this perspective, the project can be read as a practice of text transformation, analogous to land art applied to writing, in which supports, devices, and material traces constitute a field of work subject to modifications imposed by the investigative method itself.



«What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning.»
Werner Heisenberg

Unmastered Bones(Reactivating the Score), Angelo D’Amato curator, Civico 23 Art Space, Salerno, 08/11-22/11/2025, LN 2025, ISBN 979-8270773069 [Asemic-Concrete-Eng-It] / buy: catalogue black and white | catalogue full colour