Symposium

Thursday 19th & Friday 20th September 2024
Malta Society of Arts,  Palazzo de la Salle, Republic St, Valletta, Malta

Figure It Out The Art of Living Through System Failure is collaborative project that has been granted support under the Creative Europe program, sub-program Culture, of the European Education and Culture Executive Agency. Collaborators are Drugo More (HR) (Project Lead), Kiosk (RS), La Labomedia Association (FR), Vektor (EL) and Unfinished Art Space (MT). The project explores a range of practices that enable disenfranchised groups to overcome barriers established by administrative, institutional, and algorithmic regimes.

Gendered, racialized, bordered and exploited, marginalised, underserved, discriminated and vulnerable communities are often forced to develop tools and strategies that are considered unacceptable to the institutions of the system; thus developing practices and phenomena of coping, tinkering, making-do and circumventing exclusions. Sometimes these tools and strategies are forged out of necessity, of survival, sometimes to exercise rights or to secure access to basic services available only to ‘deserving’ citizens. Such tools and strategies are always aimed at a certain system (state, welfare institutions, corporations, workplace, credit, housing, utilities etc.) that has its own rules and conditions of access that these communities or individuals cannot meet, producing and reproducing systemic exclusion.

Finding ‘holes in the system’ and developing strategies to take advantage of system weaknesses, people use their ingenuity to avoid detrimental effects on their lives and lives of their communities.

Moreover, such practices have now expanded into the digital sphere, where they are facing new kinds of power structures and also getting recombined in interesting ways. As dataveillance, algorithmic governance and digital profiling seep into mechanisms of exclusion and dispossession, from border controls to public transport, education, health and housing, new workarounds, tinkering and hacking emerges. As they do with the growing impacts of climate change, forcing underserved communities across the globe to be resourceful and devise their own forms of adaptation.

See the Symposium programme here

Information about travelling to Malta here

Information on the Figure It Out exhibition is here

Abstracts

  • The submarine wired network — dominated by content providers, social media, and multinational technology companies — shapes the current "Undersea Continuous Monument", one of the most influential and polluted places in the world. This is what Weber referred to as "the iron cage" of economic rationality, driven by invisible informational networks and transnational private interests. Unlike people crossing seas and lands, the flow of data and capital remains uninterrupted. This became particularly evident during the pandemic lockdown, which did not affect the data extraction or prevent private and inter-state cyber attacks.

    Bulle Cybernetique is a commercial exchange object, a scent formula potentially capable of circumventing State confinement measures and media censorship, while containing encrypted information. The scent formula has been developed by analysing World Cyber Crime maps and major cyber attacks involving countries and large companies, due to web threats, sabotage, espionage… Each type of attack, as well as the States or companies involved, is associated with specific olfactory notes based on precise associative criteria, which the algorithm code is instructed with. The development of an olfactory code has been conceived in collaboration with Diletta Tonatto, fine nose, sociologist of olfaction, and founder of Tonatto Profumi. The fragrance, like an enigma code, would also be decoded through a technique called headspace analysis in combination with gas mass chromatography to determine the chemical components of the scent formula and decipher the 'encrypted message' it carries.

    Bulle Cybernetique is a luxury product that embodies the perturbing aspects of technology, unveiling underground and invisible facts through a mysterious, seductive, aerial, and ephemeral essence.

  • Artificial Worldviews is a series of inquiries into the system underlying ChatGPT about its descriptions of the world. Utilising prompting, data gathering, and mapping, this project investigates the data frames of »artificial intelligence« systems. Artificial intelligence and machine learning methods are often referred to as black boxes, indicating that the user cannot understand their inner workings. However, this trait is shared by all living beings: we come to know a person not by examining their brain structures but by conversing with them. The so-called black box is not impenetrable since we can gain an understanding of its inner workings by interacting with it. Through individual inquiries, we can only acquire anecdotal evidence of the network. However, by systematically querying ChatGPT's underlying programming interface, we can map the structures of the system. In the talk, I will elaborate on my research on ChatGPT, in which I methodically request data about large-scale, indefinable human concepts and visualise the results. These outputs visualise expansive data structures and unusual, sometimes unsettling worldviews that would otherwise be unimaginable. The terms »power« and »knowledge« unfold vast discourses from philosophy, politics, and social sciences to natural sciences; they hold multidimensional meanings within social relations. The resulting graphics resemble narratives found in the works of Franz Kafka or Jorge Luis Borges, representing an infinite library of relational classifications, bureaucratic structures, and capricious mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion.

  • With the aspirational agenda to collect “the sum of all human knowledge”, the free and open encyclopaedia Wikipedia has been consistently the only non-profit website in top 20 for most of the last 20 years (often in top 10, sometimes top 5). However, as a participatory platform dominated by contributors from the USA, who are most often cis, white, straight, male, middle aged, middle class, strongly biased to anglo-saxon culture, led to huge content gaps. This is further manifested in the policies, interfaces, infrastructures, volumes of open data, free media and other parts of Wikimedia ecosystem.

    Progressive Wikimedians have tried in the past decade to compensate for this, to reduce those gaps, to advance to a more diverse participation, representation and ownership, but also to innovate work and relations through feminist, queer, decolonial and other methods. Many have experienced toxic reactions, gaslighting and sometimes organised sabotage of their work to the point of burnout and leaving the platform.

    Z. Blace presents some of the less conventional strategies for survival and solidarity building in progressive work and Wikipedia traumas from the perspective of queer instigator, feminist and anti-colonial ally.

  • Azahara Cerezo has moved her artist's website files to a small portable server that can be connected to a solar panel. Using a small mirror and a camera, the server takes selfies and displays them on the main page of the website, so that whoever enters it sees part of the elements that physically support it, that is, that support her work.

    The talk takes as its starting point this Duchampian "boîte-en-valise" of cognitive labour to analyse the possibilities, but also the contradictions of the project itself. The session proposes to connect "Mobile server" to other works done and in progress around the ambivalence of autonomy, the material dependencies of the digital sphere and the tensions around the idea of decentralisation.

  • AUTO()construcción is a real-time audiovisual project that fuses live coding and cinema, called "live cinema coding". It incorporates AI-powered data visualization and procedural 3D animation using gaming platforms. The project examines informal housing globally, envisioning the growth of megacities through DIY design systems. Informal architecture, prevalent in North America, Latin America, Asia, India, and European peripheries, offers a pragmatic response to urban challenges. Analyzing cinematic representations of futuristic cities and the architectural provocations of the avant-garde of modernism, AUTO()construcción transcends the limits of traditional practice. It serves as a catalyst to reinvent the urban landscape, challenging conventional architectural norms and the role of non-architects, self-taught design and the emergence of housing in multiple sectors that in 2024 will be equivalent to 70% of the world, actions in the face of the impossibility of the citizen middle in the real estate market, self-construction after years of existence has grown and configured the built environment in its own language challenging traditional architectural norms. AUTO()construction transforms living spaces into continuous expressions of flexibility and informality, reflecting diverse notions of freedom. Through a non-gaming approach, the project uses video game engines for cinematic expression, exploiting real-time capabilities for immersive experiences. It employs machine learning techniques such as StyleGAN to explore global architectural styles, allowing the synthesis of diverse influences into unique architectural facades. The fusion of styles from regions such as Cuba, Bolivia, Mexico and Bombay blurs the line between human creativity and mechanical interpretation, fostering new design possibilities.

  • How does it feel when you are looking for another educational program and your family and friends tell you: Are you going to study all your life, you are almost forty? Haven't you studied enough and never found a well paid job or anything to do with what you have studied?

    2024 is different. I rolled into 2024 mourning the creative past, jumping like a grasshopper from one project to the other and yearning for a mellow year of training, developing my skills, and staring into space and its problems. How does it feel when your projects are exhibited yet feel dead lined unfinished? How much could I possibly spend more out of my pocket to create a show for the same people plus maybe 10 more but 10 less of the before to attend? How much more space can I have at home to fill with my own artworks? What to do with my body that is exhausted and numb to be present to start thinking about finding the new subject to make another show.

    'When Good Enough is Enough: the premiere' is instead a year-long slow performance-installation that delves into combining my different educational practices as mentioned in a CV, developing new skills and finding a different way to educate myself slowly and patiently by re-researching my true self - not the one created for the art system to keep thriving and placing me into a line of competition and shared posts.

    I am creating another level of education for myself; one that is different from ‘Education’ as a system or a multi-disciplined performance in a disciplined worked-out world. The education system still feels like a dance that needs to be rushed and its outcome results in an ever-exhausting loop. I have educated myself to imagine where all this education can take me to, and I am still arriving and perhaps I will never arrive. I imagine a chair as a continuous prop to play with as well as clapping and booing sounds, repetition of text like when you are forcing yourself to learn by hard and blank moments immersed in burnout.

    Costume design: Sarah Portelli
    Ssoundscape: Tina Camilleri
    Photography: Alisa Komarova  

  • As technology moves forward, our interpretation of it becomes increasingly complex. Data-driven platforms, generative AI, synthetic data, algorithmic agency and automated decision-making systems are only a few examples of the profound integration of AI into everyday life. The increasing interaction between human and non-human agents is shaping new types of social relationships enabling new ways of being and acting in the world. What kind of intelligence are we creating? What are the socio-political and ethical implications of computational systems? How do these technologies reinvent traditional notions of power and control? By embedding artistic practices in the broader narratives of AI, artists emerge as crucial agents in navigating and deciphering the digital transition, which is not only culturally but also socially transformative.

  • Together with Mara Ferreri, Davor Misković, and Marcell Mars, Valeria and Tomislav undertook a research project to complement the artistic interventions of "Figure It Out: The Art of Living Through System Failure." By hosting bonfire storytelling sessions, conducting interviews, engaging in online ethnography, and diving into bibliographic research, they have been gathering stories of popular illegalisms from a variety of contexts. Their aim is to uncover the underlying logics that connect these acts of defiance and to reflect on the nuanced strategies of refusal necessary to honour their rich complexities. This research will be published as a book and an e-zine in November 2024; during this symposium Valeria and Tomislav will discuss their research process as a preview.

  • Over the past year, Ilina has been documenting what she calls techlore – ‘folk knowledge’ on the complex and opaque functionalities of the modern technologies that surround us. These techlore stories touch on issues affecting our data and privacy, the shortcuts we use to fix our devices and the explanations we find for technological mysteries. For her project Advice Well Taken, Ilina collected folk tales of digital salvation: everyday stories of anthropomorphisation, hacking and corner-cutting. They show how ordinary people are doing what they can to assert control over technology. During this talk Ilina will share some of those stories with the public as well as what she has learned from hours of interviews conducted with people from all sorts of backgrounds.

  • The work Women’s Affairs is a result of a series of encounters and conversations with women across Serbia, within which we shared stories about survival techniques and navigating the gaps of a state benefit system which constantly fails to assist and support life. We talked about lifelong work without a single day of official employment, about the diverse grey-zones of labour, about real and fictional earnings, invisible union struggles of women, mutual solidarity, the dysfunctional administrative web of social benefits, fake and real divorces, perseverance, small life gestures of resistance and big struggles we undertake. The stories and experiences we recorded testify to the incredible imagination and heroic endeavours of women in a hostile environment and various skills we acquire through life and coping. Hospitality, honesty, wonderful homemade specialties, vital energy and strength were all major ingredients of our informal gatherings full of playfulness and joy. The created material of stories. sounds and photographs we now share both through an art installation and new live encounters.

  • With Ghost Work, !Mediengruppe Bitnik looks at the ingenious practices which people with little or no power devise when systems fail them. Ghost Work collects mechanisms and resources devised to build resilience in remote work systems and on freelance work platforms. The research focuses on the ingenuity of workers in the global gig factory and particularly on tactics the workers on platforms such as Upwork based in the Eastern Europe and the Global South contrive to fake their location or presence to circumvent scant pay, surveillance and control that is frequently not expected from the gig workers in the Western Europe and the Global North.

  • Historically, women have been neglected by traditional labs. Through this research, I challenge and criticise the definition of the laboratory based on the science model, which is not exempt from the dominant “racist, sexist, and colonial past” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.287). In doing so, I introduce a feminist perspective of the laboratory following authors such as Lori Emerson and practices in feminist hackerspaces. According to Emerson and Livio, there exists a marginalised underrepresentation of people “in lab leadership, membership, and communities” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.288). Labs must include women as well as feminists’ concerns, adding and restructuring “the way labs work" (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p. 289). One of the problems of the laboratory environment is access. Access is complex, and unbalanced practices are recognised when analysing who accesses the lab. Access depends not only on performativity but also on resources. Another detrimental aspect of labs is a “privilege, especially in higher education” (ibid.). Generally, those with access to lab environments are “employed by an institution of higher education” (ibid.), so expertise accesses the lab, and these become “gendered, colonial and racial” (ibid.) spaces. According to Emerson and Livio, it is required to “change to better welcome those potential participants” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.290). I understand this as a structural and societal issue founded in the origins of science in colonial thinking: “history of labs is inseparable from the history of science, [as] science is a project with colonial origins” (ibid.), and so “writing alternative histories of labs” (ibid.) is required, including those “marginalised [and] excluded in the scientific codification” (ibid.), because “‘scientific knowledge’ and historical approaches are incomplete” (Dickson, in Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.290). According to Livio and Emmerson, “inclusion of diverse persons and perspectives” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.290) is required to build a feminist lab, where “counter-methods” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.291) can be practised through community access and participation. Moreover, considering the lab as a place for knowledge production, Emerson and Livio highlight the need for “transparency about funding and research stakeholders” (ibid.). Feminist labs, according to Haraway, should practise principles of “partiality and not universality” (Haraway, in Emerson and Livio, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.291). Donna Haraway's idea of "partiality and not universality" in the context of feminist labs suggests that these laboratories should embrace a situated and specific position, acknowledging the diversity of experiences and perspectives of individuals, particularly women, rather than attempting to establish a single universal view. This approach recognizes that different women have different experiences and challenges, and it seeks to highlight and address these diverse perspectives instead of imposing a singular worldview. It emphasises the importance of difference, openness, and diversity rather than assuming a universal, hegemonic, imposing view. These feminist labs have “more-than-human concerns” (Livio and Emerson, in Bogers and Chiappini, 2019, p.295), considering non-human living beings and community members. These raise “ethical questions” (ibid.), and labs become places for “ethical material” (ibid.), where humans, animals, and marginalised groups will become Earth's living beings by occidental science.

  • This lecture-performance is shaped by the author's personal audio-visual aesthetics informed by a subjective view of activist directions that are DIY at their core: declaring independence, digital autonomy, and tiny #BeYourOwnPlatform movement against obvious enshittification of digital platforms for musicians. The state of "digital work & life" seems to be defined by transformation into »techno-feudalism«, increasing slavery to data-sucking algorithms, A.I. systems scraping art works, digital "property" and other »creative content«, and corporate platforms unable to moderate alt-right nazis, TERFs and transphobes while censoring reports of lived experiences of genocide. Amidst all this are tiny movements of indie smolwebs, digital gardeners and frugal computing enthusiasts. The hashtag marks a small effort to reinvent DIY ethics that is calling for cultural and political emancipation in the techno-reality: anti-consumerist, using free software, decentralised, self-hosted, federated and home-grown.

  • The idea of dysfunction and inefficiency in technology can be approached not as an accidental and inconsistent state of knowledge in the present, but as a prepared-for and intentional condition for future knowledge. Starting with this proposal, my paper goes on to look at digital infrastructures and their associated workflows and systems in the moments of their breakdown. Why something is out of order is a crucial question for strategic thinking, I argue, because it does not merely reveal the assumptions of what the supposed working order is, but gets to the reasons why the malfunction is required, and who the beneficiaries are. Beyond the disrepair itself, thus, the paper focuses on its key consequences that condition the digital infrastructure for the uncertain future. Engaging with DevOps as the empirical encounter of software development and IT operations, I work to reverse the meaning of the discipline to become the strategic tool that provides the computational means of dealing with uncertainty. Current DevOps sees the dysfunction reactively as the inconsistency between the constant flows of software requirements on the one hand and the organisation’s communications on the other. Here the inconsistency is only aggravated by the attempts at fixing it, which is confirmed by the unexpectedly inefficient returns in IT, known as Solow’s paradox. In terms of strategic thinking, DevOps requires a way of dealing with ignorance in the abstract form, which would be compatible with the audit protocols of the digital infrastructure and could be brought in as its scalable feature. I find that the two ways of preparing for future knowledge - abductive reasoning and the Bayesian situated approach - offer two sets of means for creating such abstractions. The former, abduction, is often used as a way of preserving ignorance for decision-making when dealing with unknown variables. The latter is a variation of the Bayesian approach that deals with the specific material entanglements, as philosopher Karen Barad puts it, and thus always leaves room for uncertain and contingent, while simultaneously offering a scale-free solution for creating strategically inefficient digital infrastructures.

  • In this presentation I explore my practice research with adolescent girls in London. My PhD research is interested in adolescent girls’ performances of self in digital spaces, and the potentiality of autobiographical art and performance making to disrupt algorithmically-driven decision-making about the sharing of social media content. My research asks: who/what could adolescent girls be online? And how might social media provide new worlds for them, within a material world that is often ill-equipped for their survival? With early versions of Facebook asking, “what’s on your mind?”, encouraging users to share a “status” with friends, and Instagram now encouraging users to share content to their “story”, social media presents itself, first and foremost, as a personal space to share your life with the select few that you accept into it. The reality, however, is that these capitalist and highly-marketized platforms prioritise and reinforce hegemonic performances of femininity that are used to exploit women and girls in order to sell them products. My applied theatre practice research explores how adolescent girls’ emerging autobiographical performances of digital self, might disrupt these hegemonic ideas of girlhood, resisting, or refusing, the computational limitations of the platform and focussing instead on content produced for the creator, not the consumer. I draw on cyberfeminist ideas that encourage social media users to be a ‘glitch’ in the machine, to intentionally cause system failures as an act of feminist resistance. Through an engagement with Butler’s and Goffman’s theorisations of the self as something that shifts, and can never be fully realised, I position social media as a catalogue, or portfolio of self; the ‘doing’ of self is documented in words, photos and videos that continue to exist beyond the moment of articulation. Research at the intersection of performance, and social media, predominantly explores performances made with or about social media, where social media functions as a performance making tool, or a subject to be explored through the performance. This presentation will explore how this relationship might operate in the opposite direction; How might theatre and performance making skills impact how participants engage with social media? How might we view the production of social media content as one and the same as producing any other form of art or performance? This presentation details the first phase of my practice – a series of exploratory creative workshops focussed on autobiographical art and performance making with digital and non-digital methods – and considers, in what ways are adolescent girls engaging with and narrating themselves on digital platforms, and to what extent can performance techniques alter or develop their engagement with social media?

Roundtable: CLEANING WORK REIMAGINED: STRUGGLES, MAINTENANCE, AND THE POSSIBILITY OF CARE JUSTICE
Moderator: Valeria Graziano

Sticky Care | Bettina Knaup

Eleven Theses on the Pedagogy of Cleaning | Janna Graham

On the cleaning of the contemporary university: an institutional analysis of the Goldsmiths crisis | Louis Moreno

Cleaning and restoring: a dilemma at the heart of ecological transition | Tomislav Medak

Convenors: Valeria Graziano (Justus-Liebig University, Giessen) & Davor Misković (Drugo More, Rijeka)

This interdisciplinary roundtable aims to explore the diverse narratives and experiences of those engaged in various forms of cleaning labour, in formal and informal conditions and settings, including data cleaning and artistic practice. Cleaning involves the removal of unwanted elements—dirt, dust, germs, disturbing images, and inaccurate information—from spaces, bodies, and systems. It is a form of care essential for maintaining safe, healthy, and comfortable environments for individuals and communities. Clean and organized spaces can positively impact our mental and emotional well-being. However, those who perform cleaning tasks often receive the least care and recognition in our society, both materially and symbolically.

This kind of work is often racialised, gendered, and pauperized. Workers are frequently unpaid, underpaid, and unglamourised, reflecting broader societal inequities. Historically, feminist refusal of cleaning has been a significant aspect of social struggles, challenging the traditional gender roles and labour expectations imposed on women. Additionally, questions of purity, dirtiness, and hygiene have long accompanied Western philosophical and colonial discourses. These notions continue to influence how cleaning work is perceived and valued, often reinforcing existing power structures. Social pressures to maintain a clean home and body act as key normative mechanisms in society, reinforcing certain standards and expectations. This extends to the necessary infrastructure for the functioning of our institutions, where cleanliness ensures the smooth operation and maintenance of order. Nowadays, technological imaginaries often promise a future where cleaning is no longer necessary, presenting a vision of automated perfection. However, the reality is far more complex, with technology both enabling and challenging traditional cleaning roles. By examining the often-invisible labour of data cleaners, we aim to uncover hidden power dynamics and systemic issues that underpin our digital age.

The round-table will delve into the complexities of care within the context of cleaning, examining how individuals navigate their roles as both workers and caregivers. We will explore innovative practices and strategies employed by cleaners, including creative uses of technology, to reclaim agency and challenge dominant labour patterns.

The round-table is organised as part of the activities of the Working Group „Analysis, Theory & Politics Of Care”, part of the COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)- funded project: TOOLKIT OF CARE (TOC), CA21102 (https://www.cost.eu/actions/ CA21102/).

Bios

Elena Giulia Abbiatici | Politecnico of Milano

Art historian, researcher and contemporary art curator, lecturer at POLI.Design. Elena Giulia Abbiatici has exhibited and developed projects at numerous contemporary art venues, including: I,II,III edition Something Else - Off Biennale Cairo (2015, 2018, 2023), 56th and 57th Venice Art Biennale (2015, 2017), 15th Venice International Architecture Biennale (2016), Media Art Festival Maxxi Prize (2016), 15th Istanbul Biennale (2017), Berlin Art Week (2017), Manifesta 12 Collateral Events Palermo (2018), MACRO Museum, Rome (2012); AW Museum, Iksan, South Korea (2018); Silent Barn, New York (2014).
Her latest ongoing project "THE ETERNAL BODY. The human senses as a laboratory of power between ecological crisis and transhumanism', is a study on the theme of the control and abuse of our senses in neuro-structural terms and the progressive artificial and transcendent enhancement of our bodies. The theme was approached through two types of sensory overload, among the most underestimated and deregulated, such as acoustic and olfactory pollution, read against the backdrop of a process of advanced transhumanism, i.e. a political-religious attempt to inhabit and dominate human vulnerabilities. Conducted since 2021, thanks to the ITALIAN COUNCIL award (9th edition 2020), it was presented, among others, at “L’Orientale” University of Naples, Tor Vergata University of Rome, Concordia University Montreal, POLIDesign Milano, RWTH Aachen University, GAD-Giudecca Art District Venice, Palazzo delle Esposizioni Roma, Elisir TV Rai 3, PittiFragranze Florence, Walkin studios (Bangalore), Bs-Bg 2023 Capitali Italiane della Cultura, ISEA 2024.

Kim Albrecht

Kim Albrecht visualizes cultural, technological, and scientific forms of knowledge. His diagrams unfold and question the structures of representation, and explore the aesthetics of technology and society. Kim is a Professor at the Film University Babelsberg Konrad Wolf, principal at metaLAB (at) Harvard, director of metaLAB (at) FU Berlin, and an affiliate of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society Harvard. Kim holds a PhD from the University of Potsdam in media theory, and he has exhibited, among others, at Harvard Art Museums, Four Domes Pavilion Wrocław, Ars Electronica Center, Cooper Hewitt, Cube Design Museum, ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Kaestner Gesellschaft, The Wrong Biennial, Istanbul Contemporary Art Museum, and Kunsthaus Graz.

Željko Blaće | LGBT+, CEE Spring, exPatYUGOdiasporas, Art+Feminism, Open GLAM

Z. Blace (b. 1976 Željko Blaće, in Čapljina, Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia), roams between Zagreb, Berlin, Brussels, Ghent, Stuttgart, most recently in Split, Rijeka, Ljubljana, Mostar and family residence in Podaca, but most reliably online as ~Zblace.
...(in+)consistently working (in-)between fields of contemporary culture and arts, digital technology and media, community sports and activism – by cross-pollinating queer/feminist/de-colonial/commoning/degrowth perspectives and embodied experiences with thinking, doing and organizing methods across different networks and contexts... monoskop.org/Z._Blace

Azahara Cerezo

Azahara Cerezo is a visual artist currently based in Girona (Catalonia, Spain). She has exhibited solo work at Bòlit Contemporary Art Centre (Girona) and Centro de Arte La Regenta (Las Palmas), and taken part in group shows at Bienalsur (Cúcuta, Colombia), Santa Mònica (Barcelona), Nieuwe Vide (Haarlem, Netherlands), MUSAC (León) and MACBA (Barcelona), among others. Her projects have been selected in the European programme ARTeCHÓ - Art, Economy & Technology, the Paradigm Shifts grants by mur.at (Graz, Austria) or the Summer Sessions art and technology residencies (V2, Rotterdam and Hangar, Barcelona). She graduated in Audiovisual Communication (Autonomous University of Barcelona) and holds a Master in Visual Arts and Multimedia (Polytechnic University of Valencia). Since 2022, she is also a collaborating teacher at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC). www.azaharacerezo.com

CNDSD & Ivan Abreu

As artists, the creative programmers Malitzin Cortés (aka CNDSD) and Iván Abreu embark on a journey through the limitless universe of code. Their collaboration spans a wide range of disciplines, from architecture and sound art to algorithmic music and the intersection of science and technology.
Together, they engage in a thought-provoking and highly experimental dialogue, giving birth to a tapestry of new media poetics that is continually evolving through immersive experiences, data driven artworks and audiovisual practices.
Within this dialogue, CNDSD takes advantage of noise and composition, visual and sound, conjuring them live. Meanwhile, Iván Abreu intervenes in the realm of 3D graphics and spaces, using generative animation, real-time video synthesis, and light control to create captivating images. Together, they offer an intense exhibition of code and music, giving artificial life to audiovisual landscapes that transcend the limits of reality. livecinemacoding.xyz

Charlene Galea | poet/mover/image-maker/carer/curator/rubbish-collector/story-lover

Charlene Galea is a multidiscplinary artist whose body is both her canvas and subject of research. Her work stems from her curiosity about the world and the contrasts between online identity and physical experiences, narrated mostly through performance where she has several identities in which she performs. whilst being sensitive to space and sound. These two elements often fuel her to move and tell stories.
Memories of lived experiences and contemporary digital tales alike are her sources of inspiration. The effect of the media and fake news, space and the environment on human relations and communication are all bound together in her story-telling.
Charlene’s body is a prism which collects experiences, processes them and reflects back to the audience. She understands that a woman’s body is subjected to societal restrictions, and this phenomena is conveyed in her performances. Rather than being an art commodity for superficial consumption, her installation work seeks to challenge the viewer, demanding attention and immersion. Intricate political messages are often told in playful, humorous ways. Charlene’s aim is to ask complex questions – not offer answers.
Chalene’s educational background is diverse and includes Tourism studies, Beauty Therapy, BA in Creative Direction for Fashion and MA in Digital Fine Arts. She believes in artistic freedom and intimacy with audience.
www.charlenegaleaartwork.com

Katerina Gkoutziouli

Katerina Gkoutziouli is a curator, researcher, project manager and co-founder of VEKTOR Athens, currently based in Athens, Greece. She holds an MA in Visual Culture from the University of Westminster, London (2009) and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Athens (2007). Her main research focus is on art and digital culture exploring issues related to cultural identity, network politics, surveillance in and on the Internet, data-mining, big data and emerging AI technologies.
From January 2018 to May 2020, she was a cultural advisor for the Municipality of Athens for the European funded project ROCK focusing on the regeneration of urban spaces through culture and cultural heritage mentoring European cities on issues of citizens’ engagement and access to culture. She was also the art curator of the program “Public Building and Digital Art” commissioning the work “AthSenSe – urban data lab”, a public art installation exploring the idea of smart cities and big data, part of the placemaking project This is Athens – Polis, initiated by the city of Athens Development and Destination Management Agency (2019-2020). Since 2019, she is the Project Manager of The CoMuseum Conference, an annual global event operating as a platform of expertise for the wellbeing of cultural organizations and the communities they serve taking place at the Benaki Museum, in Athens. She has served as a jury member for S+T+ARTS4Water (2021). She is a founding member of KOLLEKTIVA for Social Innovation & Culture. She is a 2020-2021 recipient of Fulbright Fellowship.
Most recent exhibitions include Trials & Errors (2021) co-curated with Daphne Dragona, Her Data (2021) co-curated with Foteini Vergidou and, Imagine you Wake Up and there is no Internet (2020) co-curated with Voltnoi Brege.

Valeria Graziano

Valeria Graziano is a critical theorist based at the Institute for Applied Theatre Studies, Justus Liebig University Giessen. Her research and practice explore the refusal of work, the radical reorganization of social reproduction, and the possibility of political pleasures. She co-convenes the Pirate Care Syllabus project with Tomislav Medak and Marcell Mars, (book upcoming, Pluto Press, 2025).

Dasha Ilina

Dasha Ilina is a Russian techno-critical artist based in Paris, France. Through the employment of low-tech and DIY approaches, her work questions the desire to incorporate modern technology into our daily lives by highlighting the implications of actually doing so. Her practice engages the public in order to facilitate a space for the development of critical thought regarding social imperatives for care of oneself and others, privacy in the digital age, and the reflexive contemporary urge to turn to technology for answers. She is the founder of the Center for Technological Pain, a project that proposes DIY solutions to health problems caused by digital technologies for which she has received an Honorary Mention at Ars Electronica. Her project Technosommeil is in the collection of digital art works of the Département Val-de-Marne (Mallapixels). She is also the co-director of NØ SCHOOL, a summer school that focuses on critical research around the social and environmental impacts of information and communication technologies. dashailina.com

Kiosk

Kiosk is an art collective developing practice based on collaboration, participation, aesthetic experience, collective authorship and research. It was founded in 2002 in Belgrade (Serbia) by artist Ana Adamović and art historian Milica Pekić. Team members vary depending on the project and program. Women’s Affairs brought Ana and Milica together with theatre director, professor, sound and multi-media artist Branislava Stefanović and painter and multi-media artist Jelena Mijić. During the process the team grew with multiple collaborators, participants, friends and colleagues. www.kioskngo.net

Tomislav Medak

Tomislav Medak is a member of the theory and publishing team of the Multimedia Institute/MAMA in Zagreb, as well as an amateur librarian for the Memory of the World/Public library project. His research interests are in technology, capitalist development and post-capitalist transition, with a particular focus on environmental crisis, political economy of intellectual property and unevenness of techno-science.

!Mediengruppe Bitnik

!Mediengruppe Bitnik (read - the not Mediengruppe Bitnik) are contemporary artists working on, and with, the Internet. Their practice expands from the digital to physical spaces, often intentionally applying loss of control to challenge established structures and mechanisms. Their works formulate fundamental questions concerning contemporary issues.
In the past they have been known to subvert surveillance cameras, bug an opera house to broadcast its performances outside, send a parcel containing a camera to Julian Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London and physically glitch a building. In 2014, they sent a bot called «Random Darknet Shopper» on a three-month shopping spree in the Darknets where it randomly bought items like keys, cigarettes, trainers and Ecstasy and had them sent directly to the gallery space.
Their works are shown internationally, most recently in exhibitions at: Aksioma Ljubljana, Pinakothek der Moderne Munich, CAC Shanghai, House of Electronic Arts Basel, Super Dakota Brussels, Aksioma Ljubljana, Kunsthaus Zurich, Onassis Cultural Center Athens, Public Access Gallery Chicago, Fondazione Prada Milano, Shanghai Minsheng 21st Century Museum and the Tehran Roaming Biennial. They have received awards including the Swiss Art Award, PAX Art Award, Prix de la Société des Arts Genève, the Golden Cube from Dokfest Kassel and a Honorary Mention from Prix Ars Electronica.
!Mediengruppe Bitnik are Carmen Weisskopf and Domagoj Smoljo. They are currently based in Berlin.
wwwwwww.bitnik.org

Laura Netz | UAL LCC CRiSAP

Curator, artist, and researcher. Laura Netz is an MPhil student at CRiSAP – UAL, where studies the new tendencies in curatorial practices in sonic arts.

In 2006, she graduated in Art History (University of Barcelona). Consequently, studies at Master in Cultural Practices and New Media Art (University Ramon Llull). In 2009, establishes in London where attends the Curating course (Central Saint Martins, UAL). One year after, she was granted to study at MAH Media Art Histories (Donau University, Krems, Austria). In 2011, attends the professional course about New Media Curating, led by Beryl Graham (University of Sunderland).

Interested in sound art, science, technology and digital media, she is an active participant in hacking culture. Over these years, as a curator, she has taken part in many international events such as exhibitions, workshops, conferences, publications, and concerts in Spain, Portugal, UK, Mexico, Colombia, Canada, Serbia, Russia, Hong Kong, the U.S., and Brasil.

Among the collaborations, she developed projects with various institutions such as Fonoteca Nacional de Mexico, MACBA Museum of Contemporary Art Barcelona, CCCB Centre of Contemporary Culture Barcelona, MOTA Museum of Transitory Art, ISEA International Symposium of Electronic Arts. She has worked with the following new media festivals, ArtFutura, MUTEK, Alpha-ville. She collaborates with artists such as Locus Sonus, Scanner, Roy Ascott, Konrad Becker, Fran Illich, Milo Taylor, and Arcangelo Constantini, among much more. http://netzzz.net/

Luka Prinčič

Luka Prinčič is a musician, sound designer and media artist. He has been writing music, creating sound art, performing, and manipulating new media in various ways since mid-’90s. He specialises in computer music, elaborated funk beats, immersive soundscapes, incidental music for live arts & video, and digital media experiments.
He performed at festivals like Ars Electronica (Linz), EMAF (Osnabrueck), Netmage (Bologna), MENT (Ljubljana) and Trouble (Brussels), and worked at Ljubljana Digital Media Lab (Ljudmila) and local hackerspace CyberPipe (Ljubljana).
Luka Prinčič is passionate about free software, science fiction, social awareness, critical expressions and peculiarity of contemporary human condition. He currently works at Emanat Institute and runs Kamizdat, boutique netlabel for adventurous music.
https://luka.princic.studio

Zhenia Vasiliev | Goldsmiths University London

Zhenia Vasiliev is an academic working in the fields of STS, critical administration and software studies, where they focus on developing new interdisciplinary methods to study software operations. Zhenia comes from a graphic design background and was trained as an artist (Dutch Art Institute, MA Art Praxis, 2017) before completing their PhD in Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London (2023). In London, Zhenia ran a reading group and a series of screenings in MayDay rooms, an archive for activism, has worked as an information designer at The Guardian and was in charge of software delivery at the charity art foundation. As an artist, they have organised collective action performance artworks in the UK and internationally.

Molly Wilson | Royal Central School of Speech and Drama

Molly Wilson is a theatre maker, writer, and artist whose practice is centred around feminist autobiographical storytelling. She completed a research master’s degree from the University of Cambridge, where she specialised in arts interventions in secondary school sex education, specifically in combatting the harmful impacts of a hidden curriculum on adolescent girls. She is a PhD candidate funded by the London Arts and Humanities Partnership, at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. Her research explores adolescent girls’ performances of self on social media and draws on applied theatre approaches to autobiographical art and performance making, to resist hegemonic understandings of girlhood in a digital age. Molly’s professional work has been predominantly in arts and theatre charities, working in outreach, equality, diversity, and inclusion, and creative engagement. She now works as a visiting lecturer in feminist theory and performance practice, writing for stage and screen, and arts for social change.

Figure It Out The Art of Living Through System Failure is co-funded by the European Union’s Creative Europe program.

In Malta it is supported by the NGO Co-financing Scheme of the Malta Council for the Voluntary Sector, under the Ministry for Inclusion, Voluntary Organisations and Consumer Rights, as well as the Conference Scheme of the Ministry for Finance and Employment

The round-table is organised as part of the activities of the Working Group „Analysis, Theory & Politics Of Care”, part of the COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)- funded project: TOOLKIT OF CARE (TOC), CA21102 (https://www.cost.eu/actions/ CA21102/).

Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European Education and Culture Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.