Museum of the future

Lisa Bailey

By Jackie Tracy

Foresight as a collective responsibility is an ethos embraced by the University of South Australia's future-focused museum, .听

For its director, Lisa Bailey, it鈥檚 critical to help young people contemplate the future with a sense of purpose and overcome resistance to uncertainty.听

鈥淲e are trying to build that confidence and capability to think about how the choices they make can shape a future that they desire,鈥 Lisa 鈥 a biological sciences PhD graduate of the University of 亚洲色吧 鈥 says of the museum鈥檚 mission.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e not on a set pathway. There are multiple possibilities, so the decisions and actions that we make now are going to impact that future.鈥欌櫬

That鈥檚 why MOD. aims to transport visitors to challenging and even uncomfortable places 鈥 like discussing death, as occurs in the current exhibition Forever. In Gen Z parlance, it may even give people the 鈥渋ck鈥, visceral distaste and discomfort.听

Forever concludes with Beyond Endings, where visitors converse with Eterna.Life AI team members about their own mortality and interview for a job in 2125 where their consciousness or regenerated self could live on as a cryo and cyborg concierge, memory sculptor, de-extinction vet or avatar couture designer. These roles, of course, don鈥檛 yet exist, although MOD. currently employs a Futures Officer.听

The work of MOD. has been recognised with national and international awards, as well as corporate and private philanthropic support. The Gould Gallery takes its name from Dr Ian Gould AM 鈥 UniSA Chancellor from 2008-2015 鈥 and his wife, Christine, whose support reflects their passion for the pursuit of science.听

While humans can demonstrate a remarkable ability to adapt to and embrace new technologies, Lisa Bailey believes what is lacking is the physical and social infrastructure to manage the benefits and risks.听

鈥淭here are more than 50 million people around the globe using chatbot companions, for all sorts of purposes 鈥 tutoring, health and social feedback and so on,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut it all comes down to how we are using these advances, are they helping us achieve our goals or getting in the way?聽

鈥淚n sci-fi, it鈥檚 very easy to go straight to dystopias, because that鈥檚 just imagining a distant future where we still haven鈥檛 fixed the problems that we have now. Contemplating a future where we don鈥檛 have those problems is a lot harder because it requires fixing the problems.鈥欌櫬

For 2026, the first MOD. exhibition under the banner of 亚洲色吧 University will, fittingly, be Beginnings.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e starting a new university, but also, we鈥檙e interested in this idea of how you start things,鈥 Lisa says. 鈥淭o shape the future, you must start in the present.鈥欌櫬

Forever is at MOD. until 21 November. Entry is free, 10am-5pm, Tuesday to Saturday. Beginnings opens 13 January 2026.听

Written by Jackie Tracy, Communications Coordinator for the University of 亚洲色吧. Photograph of Lisa Bailey at MOD. by Isaac Freeman, photographic editor of Lumen.听

Tagged in Lumen Wirltuti Warltati 2025, Future