Artist Secretly Hangs AI Work in Welsh Museum, Calling It ‘Participation Without Permission’

Artist Secretly Hangs AI Work in Welsh Museum, Calling It ‘Participation Without Permission’

Elias Marrow, a conceptual artist, said he secretly hung an AI-generated artwork inside the National Museum Cardiff, calling the act “participation without permission” rather than vandalism.

On October 29, Marrow installed the framed digital print, titled Empty Plate, in the museum’s contemporary art galleries, where it remained on view for several hours before staff removed it. The image depicts a schoolboy in a Welsh uniform holding a book and a blank plate, which Marrow described as representing “the state of Wales in 2025” and “referencing Victorian charity propaganda.”

According to his website, Marrow “gifted” the work to the museum, presenting it as a digital print on paper in a custom frame. The gesture, he told the BBC, who first reported the news, was intended to question “how public institutions decide what’s worth showing, and what happens when something outside that system appears within it.”

Marrow added that using AI to generate the image was “part of the natural evolution of artistic tools,” noting that he first sketched the concept before realizing it with AI.

National Museum Cardiff, one of seven sites operated by Amgueddfa Cymru (Museum Wales), confirmed the unauthorized installation. “An item was placed without permission on a gallery wall in National Museum Cardiff,” a spokesperson told the Art Newspaper. “We were alerted to this and have removed the item in question.”

While short-lived, Marrow’s unsanctioned addition echoes a lineage of guerrilla artists that challenge institutional standards, raising questions about authorship and access.

The post “Artist Secretly Hangs AI Work in Welsh Museum, Calling It ‘Participation Without Permission’” by Daniel Cassady was published on 11/12/2025 by www.artnews.com