- Heft Memos
- Posts
- Show Opens Oct 8 � Replacement Character by Luke Shannon
Show Opens Oct 8 � Replacement Character by Luke Shannon

NEW SOLO SHOW OPENS AT HEFT THIS WEDNESDAY
Luke Shannon’s Replacement Character examines surveillance and selfhood through an interactive, kinetic installation: the plotter-scanner. This custom machine, designed and built by the artist, combines a standard document scanner and a 4'×6' plotter to create a life-sized scanner bed that offers new perspectives on documenting, digitizing, and reflecting the self. This work prompts viewers to reflect on what it means to be seen—not only by other people, but by our environments, technologies, and the ubiquitous systems we increasingly engage and inhabit. In doing so, it raises critical questions about how intelligent machines read or interpret us through images.
Heft is honored to present this incredible new body of work, on view from Oct 8 – Nov 8. Preview of the artworks below, along with the RSVP link for the opening celebration next week. Details of lecture and group show to follow.
The plotter-scanner is a tool of simultaneous surveillance and witness. While the scanner suggests a clinical and impersonal perspective, the act of making images requires total closeness. The resulting prints are both precise and intimate, holding the body at scale, yet fractured at the seams. Shannon likens this to being online: an expansive presence stretched across windows and gridded feeds, pieced together from fragmentary, constantly updating views. Shannon’s engagement with the machine becomes a new form of self-portraiture: durational, ephemeral, and mirroring the artist’s own presence.
This work comes at a key moment in the conversation about art in a technological age, as artificial intelligence continues to shape culture, business, and everyday discussion. We invite all to visit the gallery, explore the works, and join the conversation with us.