Model Collapse

Model Collapse investigates the parallels between AI’s and human brain’s function decline through physical constructs made from original photographs belonging to a found family archive and custom-coded AI feedback loops.

I did not have my own family archive, and working with a found one has become a way to think through memory, loss, and identity. In this archive there are images where time, chemistry, and far-from-ideal storage conditions have done their magic, mutating the original photographs into a melted mess of color, submitting them to a random, entropic process of degradation. Through these images, I am looking for parallels between the way memory degrades in the human mind, especially in cases of dementia or Alzheimer’s, and the way AI systems also degrade when they are trained on synthetic data. I am interested in what happens when memory loses structure, when chronology collapses, when fragments remain but the whole image can no longer be seen at once.

Starting from portraits, family photographs, and damaged images from this found archive, I build works that move between physical construction and AI-generated feedback loops. In some works, each image generated by an artificial intelligence system becomes the input for the next, forming a continuous chain of self-feeding iterations. As the process unfolds, the human face is gradually deconstructed, ultimately transforming into a neutral, formless surface. In others, I assemble fragile structures from original photographs, imagining how memories might exist all simultaneously, interconnected and forming correlations, while also cutting into one another and cancelling the possibility of seeing the whole image at once, leaving always only a fragment of it.

These works are also a way to think about personal data as a new kind of archive. Just as the earth is mined for precious metals and minerals used in advanced technologies and AI infrastructure, human experience, memories, and data are also mined and commodified to satisfy the need of AI systems for human-generated data. Under the threat of model collapse, the value and rarity of our personal data become comparable to that of precious minerals. What remains, then, is a question about memory as something biological, technological, and collective at the same time: what is lost when memory degrades, what happens to identity when the archive breaks down, and what kind of society is formed when its machines begin to forget through the same systems that were built to remember.

This project is a candidate for PhMuseum Days 2026 Photography Festival Open Call

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© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
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Memory Excavation,Just as the earth is mined for precious metals and minerals (lithium, cobalt, rare earths, etc.) used in the production of advanced technological products and AI infrastructure, so too is human experience, our memories and data are “mined” (the term for this process is data mining) and commodified to satisfy the insatiable need of AI systems for human-generated data.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Dimensions: approximately 45cm x 45cm x 35 cmInspired by descriptions of the multidimensional latent space that forms the “mind” of an AI model and how information is organised in it, I assembled this fragile and delicate structure to metaphorically imagine how memories might be organised in a similar way, existing all simultaneously, interconnected and forming correlations.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
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"Soft Errors" starts from a portrait found in an anonymous family archive, possibly of the woman who preserved it. Her photo, processed through a custom coded AI feedback loop, is repeatedly regenerated until the face dissolves into a neutral surface, becoming an allegory of memory loss and model collapse.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
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“My other half” , 2026, 9cm x 6cmOriginal images of husband and wife from a found archive, assembled together.Reflecting on identity, this time as a product of interaction between people, especially lifelong partners I can only imagine the effort that goes into this process. This friction that is inherent in human interactions is what forms each one of us, in ways we may not fully be aware of.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Working with a found family archive while having lost my own has been a revealing experience for me. Focusing my research on how memory degrades in the human mind and looking for parallels of how AI functionality also degrades when AI models are trained on synthetic data, these images seem to illustrate this space, where pigments / pixels lose their structure and gradually move towards noise.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Memory Excavation,Just as the earth is mined for precious metals and minerals (lithium, cobalt, rare earths, etc.) used in the production of advanced technological products and AI infrastructure, so too is human experience, our memories and data are “mined” (the term for this process is data mining) and commodified to satisfy the insatiable need of AI systems for human-generated data.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Working with a found family archive while having lost my own has been a revealing experience for me. Focusing my research on how memory degrades in the human mind and looking for parallels of how AI functionality also degrades when AI models are trained on synthetic data, these images seem to illustrate this space, where pigments / pixels lose their structure and gradually move towards noise.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Memory Excavation,Under the looming threat of Model Collapse which can occur when artificial intelligence is trained on synthetic data, the value and rarity of our personal data become comparable to that of precious minerals.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Working with a found family archive while having lost my own has been a revealing experience for me. Focusing my research on how memory degrades in the human mind and looking for parallels of how AI functionality also degrades when AI models are trained on synthetic data, these images seem to illustrate this space, where pigments / pixels lose their structure and gradually move towards noise.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Memory Excavation,Another axis of this work was informed by my research into how the brain of people with dementia function, particularly how they perceive time in profoundly different ways than a healthy brain does. In their perception, memories lose chronological order and become entangled in a simultaneous state. For example, they may describe multiple different past events as concurrent in

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Working with a found family archive while having lost my own has been a revealing experience for me. Focusing my research on how memory degrades in the human mind and looking for parallels of how AI functionality also degrades when AI models are trained on synthetic data, these images seem to illustrate this space, where pigments / pixels lose their structure and gradually move towards noise.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Memory Excavation,Another axis of this work was informed by my research into how the brain of people with dementia function, particularly how they perceive time in profoundly different ways than a healthy brain does. In their perception, memories lose chronological order and become entangled in a simultaneous state. For example, they may describe multiple different past events as concurrent in

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Working with a found family archive while having lost my own has been a revealing experience for me. Focusing my research on how memory degrades in the human mind and looking for parallels of how AI functionality also degrades when AI models are trained on synthetic data, these images seem to illustrate this space, where pigments / pixels lose their structure and gradually move towards noise.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Dimensions: approximately 45cm x 45cm x 35 cmInspired by descriptions of the multidimensional latent space that forms the “mind” of an AI model and how information is organised in it, I assembled this fragile and delicate structure to metaphorically imagine how memories might be organised in a similar way, existing all simultaneously, interconnected and forming correlations.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

Dimensions: approximately 45cm x 45cm x 35 cmInspired by descriptions of the multidimensional latent space that forms the “mind” of an AI model and how information is organised in it, I assembled this fragile and delicate structure to metaphorically imagine how memories might be organised in a similar way, existing all simultaneously, interconnected and forming correlations.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

“My other half”, 2026 What a different person would we be if we chose a different partner? Where the self ends and where the other one begins?Today, with the rise of AI companions, or even the frictionless interaction with LLMs and other AIs, I wonder what we might be losing for the comfort of not have to deal with another human and all that messiness that this entails.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

“First photo, last photo”, 2026Original images of husband and wife from a found archive, assembled together ( their first photo at engagement and last one, shortly before the woman passed away) Reflecting on identity, this time as a product of interaction between people, especially lifelong partners I can only imagine the effort that goes into this process.

© Maria Mavropoulou - Image from the Model Collapse photography project
i

“My other half”, 2026 I wonder what happens to identity when there’s only mirroring rather than a negotiation and an exchange.What do you think we lose, and what do we become, when a “partner” is built to always agree with us?