Digital Totems

Digital Totems. Curated, animated artworks for building lobbies.

 

Future Art commissions and curates moving artworks for two-metre lobby totems, made for the building they stand in, not licensed from a library.

 

Installed for GPT, Brookfield, Winten and CBRE-managed buildings across Sydney in 2025 and 2026.

 

 

  • What is a Digital Totem?

    THE OBJECT A Digital Totem is a freestanding two-metre screen on an architectural truss base, placed in a lobby or...
    Presten Warren 'Shared Ground' Digital Totem - Two Park St, Sydney

    THE OBJECT

    A Digital Totem is a freestanding two-metre screen on an architectural truss base, placed in a lobby or

    concourse. Future Art owns its truss inventory, so a totem can be installed and removed cleanly around a building's schedule.

     

    THE ARTWORK

    Each totem shows a curated artwork animated as a short looping work, usually a five-second loop, produced from the artist's original piece with the artist's review and approval at every stage. The

    animation preserves the original palette, imagery and composition. Copyright stays with the artist.

     

    THE CURATION

    Future Art selects the artist for the building and its audience, negotiates the licence directly with the

    artist or their art centre, manages the animation production, and handles install and removal. The

    client receives one curated program, not a catalogue to choose from.

  • First Nations Digital Totems

    First Nations Digital Totems are commissioned works by First Nations artists, animated and presented with the artist's approval at every...
    Presten Warren 'Two Tribes' - 2 Park St, Sydney

    First Nations Digital Totems are commissioned works by First Nations artists, animated and presented

    with the artist's approval at every stage. Each work is licensed directly with the artist or their art

    centre, cultural review sits inside the production process, and the credit line carries the artist's

    Country.

     

    Recent programs include Presten Warren's dual-screen totems at Two Park Street for Reconciliation

    Week and NAIDOC, and Amy Allerton's The River of Unity and A Dream Made True at 580 George

    Street, both for GPT.

     

    The same program extends beyond the totem format: Presten Warren's lobby

    screens at 1 Denison Street for Winten, and Amy Allerton's Reconciliation Week and NAIDOC decals

    across World Square for Brookfield.

     

    A First Nations Digital Totem gives a building a cultural moment that is commissioned, credited and

    licensed properly, not pulled from a stock library.

  • The work, six case studies

    Two Park Street, GPT First Nations Digital Totems, installed May 2026. Artist Presten Warren, two exclusive works, dual-screen concierge installation...
    Thriving on Country - 1 Denison St, North Sydney

    Two Park Street, GPT

    First Nations Digital Totems, installed May 2026. Artist Presten Warren, two exclusive works, dual-screen concierge installation for Reconciliation Week and NAIDOC. Two-metre totems on owned truss, five second animation loops, sole licence with animation rights.

     

    580 George Street, GPT

    First Nations Digital Totems, installed June 2026. Artist Amy Allerton (Gumbaynggirr, Bundjalung and

    Gamilaroi), represented by Indigico Creative. Works: The River of Unity and A Dream Made True. Animation rights licensed per building.

     

    George Place, 363 George Street

    Digital Totems within Future Visions at George Place, October 2025 to March 2026. New-generation

    digital artists including Sarah Main. Already photographed and live on the site, reuse the existing assets.

     

    477 Pitt Street

    Digital Totems, March 2026. Artist Stefany Layton, within the Future Visions digital program. Already live on the site, reuse the existing assets.

     

    1 Denison Street, Winten

    First Nations digital screens for the lobby, May 2026. Artist Presten Warren, direct licence. The screens-in-lobby variant of the totem program, a clean reference for a corporate headquarters tower.

     

    World Square, Brookfield

    Reconciliation Week and NAIDOC decals across three buildings, 2026. Artist Amy Allerton via Indigico

    Creative. The window-and-door variant of the same First Nations placemaking program, included to

    show the totem sits inside a broader curated activation.

  • LICENSED. CURATED. DELIVERED.

    THE TOTEM Two-metre screen on an architectural truss base. Future Art owns its truss inventory, so install and removal run...
    Stefany Layton & Mia Forrest - Digital Totems, George Place

    THE TOTEM

    Two-metre screen on an architectural truss base. Future Art owns its truss inventory, so install and

    removal run to the building's schedule rather than a supplier's.

     

    THE ANIMATION

    Original artwork animated as a five-second loop, produced from the artist's high-resolution files and

    released only after the licence is settled. No advertising, no screensavers, one curated work per totem.

     

    THE LICENCE

    Direct with the artist or their art centre. Animation rights are written into the licence with three

    standing guard-rails: the original imagery, palette and composition are preserved, the artist retains

    review and approval, and copyright stays with the artist.

     

    FIRST NATIONS PROTOCOL

    First Nations works are licensed directly with the artist or their art centre, with cultural review and the

    artist's approval at each stage, and the credit line carries the artist's Country.

     

    THE REPORTING

    Every program comes with a tenant-facing artist story for the building's comms, and on request an

    ESG and acquittal pack for DA conditions and placemaking reporting.

  • The relationships

    Future Art works directly with artists, their representatives and First Nations art centres. Current collaborations include Injalak Arts (West Arnhem...
    Injalak Arts Center 'Arnhem Land' - Screen Printing since 1980's

    Future Art works directly with artists, their representatives and First Nations art centres.

     

    Current collaborations include Injalak Arts (West Arnhem Land), whose national touring exhibition we curate, Indigico Creative, representing Amy Allerton, and First Nations artists Presten Warren and Amy

    Allerton.

     

    Our digital roster includes Sarah Main, Stefany Layton, Giant Swan and Mia Forrest. Every work is curated and licensed directly, not drawn from a stock library.