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Decolonizing AI in Visual Design: Expanding Algorithms Beyond the Western Canon

In 2015, Google’s Photos app misclassified Black individuals as “gorillas,” exposing critical biases in AI-driven image recognition. This and similar incidents underscore the urgent need to expand AI training datasets beyond Western-centric perspectives and norms. As AI-driven platforms increasingly shape our experiments with typography and visual design, research on non-Roman typography and non-Eurocentric visual cultures is essential to mitigating algorithmic biases and misrepresentation.

This presentation examines how studying complex visual cultures—such as Islamic manuscripts and Iranian poster design—can provide insights into diverse typographic systems. I will analyze and classify Islamic manuscripts from 610 CE to 1900 to explore the historical relationship between typography and image in contemporary Iranian poster design. Additionally, I will reflect on how my “in-between” lived experience as a US-based Iranian design-educator offers an authentic perspective that makes this analysis accessible to a Western audience. By studying historical interplays between type and image in multicultural settings, designers and design educators can develop a structured approach to understanding non-Western visual traditions and their relevance in contemporary design. Such insights can inform the datasets used by AI-driven image generators and design toolkits, fostering more inclusive design practices.

In this talk, I will also argue that the role of designers, design educators, and students extends far beyond that of passive users confronted with rapidly shifting technology. Instead, as creative leaders, they must actively engage with these advancements, enriching AI-driven design practices with historical and cultural knowledge. By seizing this opportunity, designers can shape the future of technology to be more inclusive, ensuring that AI design systems reflect the full spectrum of global visual cultures rather than reinforcing a Western-dominated canon.

Mehrdad Sedaghat Baghbani 2025
Speaker

Mehrdad Sedaghat Baghbani

Mehrdad Sedaghat is a multidisciplinary artist, designer, and educator based in Florida. His creative practice navigates the complex interplay of cultural identity, diaspora, and the human experience in multicultural societies. Drawing from his life between Iran and the United States, Mehrdad’s work explores the emergence of a hybrid visual culture through installations that integrate typography, imagery, objects, sound, and video. Guided by an Eastern philosophical and poetic perspective, his art examines the challenges faced by immigrants in Western societies, offering a nuanced perspective on the tensions between belief and fact, memory and reality, intuition and materialism.

Mehrdad’s work has been exhibited internationally, including at the MSU's Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum and the 14th Florence Biennale. Currently an Assistant Professor at Florida Atlantic University, he aims to prepare students for professional practice and foster an understanding of art and design as a means of social dialogue.