Jeamin Cha
Ellie's Eye
Jeamin Cha’s essay-film Ellie’s Eye is an extensive examination of the human mind and the effects of new technology, such as chatbots and virtual avatar therapists on the mental health industry. One such avatar, named Ellie, was developed by the University of Southern California’s Institute for Creative Technologies. Ellie has the ability to interpret the user’s emotions through data collected from their speech and physical gestures to indicate psychological distress on a micro-level, which would be imperceptible by a human therapist. Cha equates the technology’s aptitude to “see-through” emotional facades with the age-old desire to see into the human body and mind. By tracing the history of more ubiquitous technology such as the x-ray, Cha questions the limits of pathology and challenges the notion that our sickness is only within us.
Cha’s visual language is informed by extensive research and interviews and is often guided by her astute observations of society and an earnest sensitivity to her surroundings. Simultaneously, her practice draws from chance encounters, unexpected discoveries, and daily observations. Her unique manipulation of the camera and ability to use documentarian practices, not to directly distinguish fact from fiction, but to reveal the multiple and shifting realities of the world we live in is pertinent in this film. Ellie’s Eye marks a significant juncture in Cha’s practice as it brings the foundations of Cha’s decade-long inquiries into the friction between modernism and tradition, the accelerating isolation of urban society and its discordance with nature, to the surface. Ellie’s Eye was produced while Cha was artist-in-residence at KADIST San Francisco and was commissioned as part of her solo exhibition Jeamin Cha, Troubleshooting Mind I, II, III in 2020.