Mobley’s art is a dialogue—one that asks us to consider how digital media is not simply a reflection of our world but a force that actively shapes it. His installations and performances reveal the tensions between visibility and erasure, between the histories that survive and the ones lost to time. He challenges audiences to see beyond the polished interfaces of technology and confront the deeper, more complex realities that lie beneath.
Through the merging of critical making and speculative design, Mobley compels us to ask: Who controls the narratives embedded in our digital world? Whose stories are amplified, and whose are left to disappear into the void?
It was a night of thought, of inquiry, and of deep reflection—an evening that reminded us of the power of art as historical testimony, and technology as both a tool and a battleground.
The Gale Memorial Lecture Series, established through the generosity of Dr. David and Sylvia Gale, continues to provide a space for artists and thinkers who challenge, provoke, and inspire. Triton Mobley did just that. And for those who were not there to bear witness, his message remains: To understand the future, we must reckon with the past.