AI imagines surreal structures that fuse arctic land with living forms and mythical figures


Designboom_ Expanding his exploration of the intersection between design, architecture, and emerging tools of technology, Canadian designer Yongwook Seong returns with another AI-generated series, this time journeying to Inuit Nunangat — the tribe’s homeland in Canada. With the help of Midjourney, the ‘Nuna’ series imagines fictional architecture that celebrates the stamp of these people on the built environment across Arctic and Sub-Arctic landscapes. From contemporary vaults with organic rounded contours and pavilions inspired by marine life to dens clad in the fur ‘coats’ of its inhabitants, the surreal renderings celebrate the roots of Inuit history, culture, and traditions.

Over a millennium, the indigenous civilization has treated the land as a sacred being, considering every animate and inanimate entity to be bonded with it. Likewise, they believe, a human being is deeply attached to the land and must therefore treat it as part of oneself. Drawing on this to devise architectural solutions across the land, water, and ice of Inuit Nunangat, designer Yongwook Seong generates a series of habitable structures, public cultural spaces, and pavilions that root living forms and mythical creatures firmly into their landscape.

In one frame, ‘Nuna’ depicts the Aiviq House, wherein a walrus has transformed itself into a habitable cabin. Meanwhile, the Issitoq Observatory draws on the Inuit myth of a flying eye deity to plant an eye-shaped volume carved from snow in search of taboo breakers. Elsewhere in Inuit Nunangat, Yongwook Seong places an ear canal-shaped ice vault that invites visitors deep into an archive to explore the rich histories of cultures in the Arctic and Sub-Arctic, while a shapeshifting Amauti parka morphs into a home on her burial site.