Contemporary art has borrowed from the archive’s organisational structure, critiqued its hegemonic influence on the construction of cultural narratives, and reconfigured its contents to reimagine the past. However, ‘archival art practice’ has not yet extensively explored issues of Big Data, or examined its effects. Big Data promises to help us better understand the world and build models that try to predict the future. Data collecting devices are inserting their sensors into our lives on an increasingly intimate scale, permeating boundaries between human and computer, the analogue and the digital, reality and fiction. How might practice based research, combined with an investigative approach, reimagine the political spaces and power structu...