The Occidental Collection is a daily, accreting counter-catalogue drawn from The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Open Access collection data.
Each release presents objects from the Met’s public records alongside subversively satirical, AI-generated catalogue entries, while preserving untouched the accompanying real world metadata: title, artist, date, medium, dimensions, accession number, and source image.
The project reverses the ethnographic gaze. Rather than treating Europe and its descendants as the unnamed center from which the rest of the world is classified, judged, and explained; The Occidental Collection turns the curatorial violence of the classificatory apparatus back upon the West. Its objects are treated as though authorless, provincial, acquisitive, imitative, anxious, devotional, commercial, historical, and strange.
These texts are not museum labels. They are counter-descriptions: colonial-style art criticism redirected toward the cultures that most confidently perfected that mode of description. They approach Western civilization not as a neutral standard, but as an innately flawed object of study that, under this satirical method, is deliberately denied the empathy required for genuine understanding.
The project does not claim to correct the Met’s catalogue. Its subject artworks are incidental polemic aids, not the targets of its criticism. The critique is aimed instead at the civilizational institutions and habits of classification, authority, and interpretation that wielded their self-serving judgments against the global majority for far too long.