6:30pm // The Arts and Politics of Immersion: Sensing, Bodies, and Machines
Keynote by Prof. Dr. Christopher Salter
The interest in immersion as a model for aesthetic experiences that involve «walking into artworks» rather than observing them at a distance has gained interest from creators, curators, and audiences over the last decade. Yet, the issues brought up by the immersion understood as digital-technologically mediated experiences, have remained unresolved.
In particular, questions of absorption/saturation versus reflection/critical distance and how immersive environments produce knowledge and experience based on the role and presence of audiences’/participants’ bodies, continue to shape discussions among art historians, anthropologists, sociologists of science in addition to practitioners.
This keynote explores the question of why artworks that «forego history in the name of a kind of intensity of experience» (as Rosalind Krauss once wrote) have become so popular in an age of increasing loss between fiction and reality, the physical world and its digital doppelgänger.
7pm // Sensing Machines
Keynote by Yasaman Sheri
As computation gains perception, the infrastructures of knowledge and understanding become increasingly legible through sensors, outsourced and infrastructural conditions of contemporary life. From machine vision to environmental sensors, sensing systems determine what becomes visible, actionable, and governed. Airborne Particles, Biological Exposure, Meta Data & Datasets and Planetary Infrastructure, are just a few examples of modern life’s imperceptibility without technical mediation. Within such a condition, sensing apparatuses operate simultaneously as tools of understanding and instruments of power.
Through examples from machine sensing, material science, and ecological monitoring, the talk examines sensing across practices and histories as sites of critical inquiry for technological and ecological entanglement. Machines, materials, and environments co-define new knowledge and ecological relationships. The talk speaks to the increased dependency on technical mediation, carrying political, cultural, and ethical questions. Drawing from design, science, and critical ecology, Sheri argues that sensing technologies do not only reveal the world, they actively configure it.
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