About
Suzanne Kite is an Oglála Lakȟóta artist, composer, and scholar whose work explores Lakȟóta ontology, artificial intelligence, and contemporary art. She creates performances, installations, and software systems that engage the body while imagining new ethical protocols for AI rooted in Indigenous philosophy. Her interdisciplinary practice spans sound, video, wearable art, poetry, and interactive technologies, with work featured at the Whitney Museum, Hammer Museum, Toronto Biennial of Art, and internationally. Kite’s writing and artwork have appeared in Atlas of Anomalous AI, Journal of Design and Science, and Canadian Art, which featured her article “Making Kin with Machines” and her sculpture Ínyan Iyé on its cover. Honors include the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholarship, Sundance New Frontiers Fellowship, Tulsa Artist Fellowship, and Women at Sundance | Adobe Fellowship. She has worked with machine learning since 2017 and has been developing body interfaces for performance since 2013.
Website / Online Presence
https://www.kitekitekitekite.com/