Future Matter

PODIUM

Future Matter is a monthly online audio series produced by Podium featuring essays and fictions proposing alternative narratives for thinking about our times, with contributors from a diversity of fields concerning art, the environment, gender, philosophy and technology. FM is run by Lesia Vasylchenko.

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  1. Future Matter #2 - Ane Graff

    2020. 11. 23.

    Future Matter #2 - Ane Graff

    Future Matter #2 "The Bodily Life" Written and Narrated by Ane Graff Sound and Mixing by Ignas Krunglevicius Cover Design by Helin Şahin The text "The Bodily Life" is about a body dealing with autoimmunity and reflecting upon issues of identity, permeability and materiality. Discussing what a body is and how it is positioned in the world, the text draws from an era of privilege, where the self was perceived not only as unique and self-contained but uncontaminated. This view is challenged along with the idea of "Horror autotoxicus", the idea that the body cannot attack itself. Autoimmune diseases refer to a collection of chronic diseases wherein normal tissues are misidentified by the immune system as "foreign" and the body starts "attacking itself". Thus the dangers of the world exist both "without" and "within". Ane Graff is an artist and researcher based in Oslo, Norway. Graff’s practice is informed by feminist new materialism – a re-thinking of our material reality, in which a process-oriented approach to matter plays an integral part. Her work traces lines between Western intellectual history and how ideas of human exceptionalism and dualism relate to the ecological disasters we face today.  Recent exhibitions include the 58th Venice Biennale, Italy; KIASMA, Finland, the Rhizome/ New Museum/ Stavanger Kunsthall collaboration 7x7; and Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art, United Kingdom. https://www.futurematter.institute

    12분
  2. Future Matter #1 - Callum Copley

    2020. 10. 09.

    Future Matter #1 - Callum Copley

    Future Matter #1   "ECHO"  Written by Callum Copley Narrated by Daan Couzijn  Sound and Mixing by Remco Hazewinkel  Graphic design by Marick Roy Echo is a work of speculative fiction set in present-day Amsterdam. Through a series of recurring encounters and chance happenings, it tells a story that at its core is a problematization of the notion of individuality and subjectivity. Inspired by Denise Ferreira da Silva’s thinking in ‘On Difference Without Separability’, Echo attempts to pick up some of the questions raised—rhetorical or otherwise—regarding the conceptual (and literal) possibilities held in discoveries around Quantum Physics. Rather than a speculative future—Echo is a provocation. It is an attempt to use non-classical physics to question the materiality of consciousness and to pose a radical reimagining of agency, relationality, empathy and interdependency. It is an attempt to think through what it means to be connected to someone; what sort of responsibilities does this entail? And how can pushing these dynamics to their extremes reveal what it might mean for new types of being with one and other? Callum Copley is a researcher and writer based between Amsterdam and the UK, examining the political and cultural entanglements of emerging technologies. Through games, film, audio and text, his work explores fiction as a method for both proposing alternative futures as well as enacting radical change in the present. He teaches at the Critical Inquiry Lab (MA) at Design Academy Eindhoven, and the Sandberg Institute, Amsterdam, where he also graduated from the Critical Studies masters program in 2018. He is co-founder of ‘Schemas of Uncertainty’ an ongoing research initiative exploring the role of prediction in a contemporary digitized society. He is editor of ‘Reworlding: Ramallah, Short Science Fiction Stories from Palestine’ (Onomatopee, 2019), author of the novella ‘φιλία’ (2018) and of the collection of short stories ‘Twitchers, Mucklarks and Gravediggers’ (2017). futurematter.institute

    1시간 13분

소개

Future Matter is a monthly online audio series produced by Podium featuring essays and fictions proposing alternative narratives for thinking about our times, with contributors from a diversity of fields concerning art, the environment, gender, philosophy and technology. FM is run by Lesia Vasylchenko.