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Robot dogs with Musk and Zuckerberg heads roam around Berlin gallery in Beeple's new exhibit

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Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Artist Beeple, Mike Winkelmann, poses inside his installation titled Regular Animals, with robots in the likeness of Kim Jong Un, left, Elon Musk, second left, Kim Jong Un, Jeff Bezos, center, and Mark Zuckerberg, right, at the Neue Nationalgalerie museum in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, April 28, 2026. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

BERLIN โ€“ Robot dogs with hyper-realistic silicone heads modeled after world-renowned figures โ€” including Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso โ€” can be seen roaming around a Berlin gallery, occasionally โ€œpooingโ€ printed images of their surroundings which they've previously captured with integrated cameras.

The animals are part of an interactive installation by American artist Beeple (Mike Winkelmann) currently showing at Berlin's New National Gallery.

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Each printed image shows a snippet of reality transformed by AI to resemble the personality of the dog or, in other words, the worldview of the human figure on its shoulders (i.e., the Picasso dog will produce images in Cubist style and Warhol's in pop art).

It's a commentary on how our perceptions are shaped by algorithms and technology platforms, the organizers of the exhibition write in the description of the event.

โ€œIn the past, our view of the world was shaped in part by how artists saw the world,โ€ Beeple told the AP. โ€œHow Picasso painted changed how we saw the world, how Warhol talked about consumerism, pop culture, that changed how he saw those things.โ€

Now our view of the world is shaped by tech billionaires who own powerful algorithms that decide what we see and what we donโ€™t see, the artist added.

โ€œThat's an immense amount of power that I donโ€™t think weโ€™ve fully understood, especially because when they want to make a change, they donโ€™t need to lobby the U.N. They donโ€™t need to get something through Congress or the EU, they just wake up and change these algorithms.โ€

The dogs also wear heads in Beepleโ€™s own image.

Lisa Botti, the curator of the exhibition in Berlin, said that artificial intelligence was one of the phenomena most impacting our lives today and that โ€œmuseums are the places where society can reflectโ€ on such transformations, which is why she wanted to have Beepleโ€™s work shown.

The work, entitled โ€œRegular Animals,โ€ was first first shown at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025.

Beeple is a graphic designer from South Carolina who does a variety of digital artwork. He is one of the founders of the โ€œeverydayโ€ movement in 3D graphics: For years, he has been creating a picture every day and posting it online without missing a single day.

According to Christie's, he is the third most expensive living artist to sell at auction, after David Hockney and Jeff Koons.

In the spring of 2021, Christieโ€™s opened bidding for Beeple's digital collage entitled โ€œEverydays: The First 5000 Days,โ€ with the sale ultimately closing at over $69 million. The auction house described the artwork as โ€œcritiques of modern society, the government and social mediaโ€ in the form of โ€œgrotesque, dystopian futures, often featuring celebrities like Donald Trump and Kanye West.โ€

Christieโ€™s said the sale marked the first time a major auction house offered a digital-only artwork with a non-fungible token as a guarantee of its authenticity, as well as the first time cryptocurrency has been used to pay for an artwork at auction.

Non-fungible tokens, known as NFTs, are electronic identifiers confirming a digital collectible is real by recording the details on a digital ledger known as a blockchain. The tokens have swept the online collecting world recently, an offshoot of the boom in cryptocurrencies.

At the Art Basel 2025 event, Beeple gave away the photos pooed by his dogs to audience members, accompanied by a certificate that read โ€œ100% organic GMO-free dog shit.โ€ Some prints had QR codes that gave access to free NFTs, which in practice meant Beeple was giving away his digital art for free for people (sometimes the subjects of the photos themselves) to potentially monetize.

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Ciobanu reported from Warsaw, Poland.


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