We are an Indigenous-led research-creation collective working across contemporary art, media, and emerging technologies. Our work develops through sustained collaboration with artists, students, knowledge holders, and communities, unfolding through shared processes, experimentation, and exchange. Projects take shape across sites, gatherings, studios, and digital environments, with attention to responsibility, continuity, and creative transformation.
We build, design, and create installations, media artworks, video, audio, and VR/XR projects that integrate relational material research and advanced computational systems. Our projects are driven by the development of land-based AI ecologies, treating technology as something formed through relationship with land, environment, and collective responsibility. Our projects unfold through sustained research-creation methodologies that (inter)connect place, process, and collaboration.
Our events bring people together through workshops, forums, exhibitions, and gatherings that support exchange, making, and conversation. These moments create space for connection across disciplines, generations, and communities, emphasizing process and collaboration. Events function as active sites of learning, production, and dialogue, extending research through presence, participation, and shared experience.
E4 Lab / Kahionhaktà:tye is a shared research-creation space organized around the four elements: Earth, Water, Fire and Air. It supports experimentation across ceramics, sustainability practices, media arts, and technology. The lab operates as a site for hands-on making, technical development, and collaborative research, where material processes and digital systems are explored together.
The gallery presents selected works, process documentation, and site-based outcomes from across our activities. It functions as a living archive rather than a static record, bringing together images, video, and documentation that reflect how projects unfold over time. Works are presented in relation rather than chronology, emphasizing process, context, and continuity. (Coming Soon).