Workers are Leaving the Factory – talk by Leonardo Impett

Join us for a presentation by Leonardo Impett, “Workers are Leaving the Factory – world models and AI after cinema”, on Wednesday 11th March, 16:00-18:00, at The Photographers’ Gallery. Further details and book a place HERE.

The presentation will argue that video models (like OpenAI’s SORA) should not be understood primarily as tools for cinema, but as infrastructures for the automation of physical labour. Drawing on Harun Farocki (who argued that since the Lumiere brothers’ Workers Leaving the Factory, cinema has always ignored the factory), Impett reframes generative video as a technology for simulating work rather than producing spectacle. While public debate remains fixated on deepfakes, copyright, and Hollywood, companies such as OpenAI, NVIDIA, and Amazon are building world simulators to train robots for warehouses, logistics, domestic labour – attempting to automate away low-paid (often migrant) workers in rich countries. Partly this is through what cinema has always done – temporal compression – allowing machines to learn in video-generated simulations at speeds impossible in real environments. 

Leonardo Impett is PI of the “Machine Visual Culture” research group at the Bibliotheca Hertziana in Rome, and assistant professor of digital humanities at the University of Cambridge. He has a background in information engineering and computer vision. His 2026 book Vector Media (with Fabian Offert) is published by Meson and the University of Minnesota Press.