WEIRD SCIENCE
AI takes the stage in upcoming show at San Antonio’s Tobin Center

Dutch collective URLAND is bringing AI-generated art to San Antonio.
From Hollywood to New York City, almost everyone is in a huff about what artificial intelligence means for the future of creativity, but one artist collective is leaning in. Dutch troupe URLAND is bringing its AI-generated performance to San Antonio’s Tobin Center for the Performing Arts March 31–April 2, 2026, exploring what human art means in digital times.
Urland will be presenting its latest work, Formerly Known As, during the three-night engagement. The show was entirely written on ChatGPT using cloned voices and the following prompt:
“Act as an experienced, experimental scriptmaker. Search the web for performance collective URLAND. Craft a theater script for their new performance about a performance collective using AI to create their new performance. Make it a Blade-Runner-esque metafiction. Make it so that the audience can’t distinguish it from an authentic Urland performance. Leave room for a plot twist at the end.”
One’s tolerance for such shenanigans no doubt depends on a tolerance for words like “metafiction.” Here’s a trailer for the piece, where everyone is wearing outfits cribbed from Saturday Night Live’s classic skit “Sprockets.”
Intrinsic art-world silliness aside, Formerly Known As does ask some profound questions about the meaning of humanity. When something that was formerly unique to humans can be created easily by machines, what does that mean for our future?
URLAND’s approach is to highlight technology’s clash with traditional storytelling. Previous shows like Bedtime Stories and The Internet Trilogy have drawn raves.
Tobin members can snag the first batch of tickets by presale; general passes will launch on November 14 at 10 am. Tickers, starting at $67.50, can be purchased online at tobincenter.org, via phone (210) 223-8624, or in-person at The Tobin Center box office at 100 Auditorium Circle downtown. Box office hours are Monday-Friday, 10 am-6 pm, and Saturday, 10 am-2pm.

This 18th century Peruvian chest features embossed leather and iron fittings.Photo courtesy of San Antonio Museum of Art






