[P2P-F] Re-rooting Digital Culture - Media Art Ecologies. ISEA. 2011.
marc garrett
marc.garrett at furtherfield.org
Wed Sep 14 13:04:34 CEST 2011
Re-rooting Digital Culture - Media Art Ecologies. ISEA. 2011.
The ideas for this interdisciplinary panel will explore the
relationship between digital culture and climate change,
developing themes adopted in grass-roots, emerging and established
practices in art, design, activism and science.
http://isea2011.sabanciuniv.edu/panel/re-rooting-digital-culture-media-art-ecologies
Sunday, 18 September, 2011 - 09:00 - 10:30
Chair Person: Ruth Catlow
Presenters:
Helen Varley Jamieson
Michel Bauwens
Paula Crutchlow
Location:
Sabanci Center Room 6
Sabanci Center, Levent
Over the last decade the awareness of anthropogenic climate change
has emerged in parallel with hyper-connective digital networks.
In the context of environmental and economic collapse people
around the world are seeking alternative visions of prosperity
and sustainable ways of living.
While the legacy of the carbon fueled Industrial Revolution plays
itself out, we find ourselves grappling with questions about the
future implications of fast-evolving global digital
infrastructure. By their very nature the new tools, networks and
behaviours of productivity, exchange and cooperation between
humans and machines grow and develop at an accelerated rate. The
rhetoric, aesthetics, technics and associated ethical questions
of digital culture are fundamentally changing social relations
as well as the nature of our material existence.
The ideas for this interdisciplinary panel have grown out of
Furtherfield's Media Art Ecologies programme and will explore the
relationship between digital culture and climate change,
developing themes adopted in grass-roots, emerging and established
practices in art, design, activism and science.
Panelists are artists and activists whose practices address the
interrelation of technological and natural processes: beings
and things, individuals and multitudes, matter and patterns.
They take an ecological approach that challenges growth economics
and techno-consumerism and attends to the nature of co-evolving,
interdependent entities and conditions; activate networks
(digital, social, physical) to work with ecological themes and
Free and Open processes.
Furtherfield
www.furtherfield.org
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