------------------------------------------------------------------ CALL for TECHNO-ECOLOGIES Exhibition and Conference proposals ------------------------------------------------------------------
TECHNO-ECOLOGIES Inhabiting the deep technological spheres of everyday life Techno-Ecologies is the theme of this year's Art+Communication festival, the 13th edition of which will take place in Riga from November 3 – 6, 2011, featuring conference (November 4–5) and exhibition (November 4–December 11) as well as broad programme of performances, screenings, public lectures and workshops in Riga and Liepaja, Latvia. * Conceptual framework Everyday life has become so intimately interwoven with complex technological ecologies that we can no longer consider technology as the alienating other. A careful consideration of the relationships between the natural and the artificial is required. The idea that we 'inhabit' technological ecologies emphasises our connectedness to our environment (material, natural, technological) and our dependence on the resources available there (material, energetic, biological, cultural). Mastering these conditions is vital to our survival on this planet. Techno-Ecologies builds upon the concerns of Felix Guattari (the French philosopher and co-conspirator of Gilles Deleuze) about the lack of an integrated perspective on the dramatic techno-scientific transformations the Earth has undergone in recent times. Guattari urges to take three crucially important 'ecological registers' into account: the environment, social relations, and human subjectivity. Techno-Ecologies will develop a discussion between artists, theorists, designers, environmental scientists, technologists, responsible entrepreneurs and activists to develop this perspective. Diversity, social and ecological sustainability, and a much deeper understanding of technology as an extension of our desires are the building blocks that we want to bring together to build a perspective that can help us chart less hazardous routes into the future than the ones currently travelled. -----> The Techno-Ecologies concept for Art+Communication 2011 festival and exhibition is developed by Eric Kluitenberg. See full concept text at the festival website: http://rixc.lv/11 ------------------------------------------------------------------ * Exhibition CALL: Artists who think that their work fits Techno-Ecologies theme (above) should send a brief description of the work plus short biography (and other relevant information) to e-mail: <rixc (at) rixc.lv> and / or <rasa (at) rixc.lv> (Rasa Smite) The DEADLINE for exhibition proposals: September 15, 2011 The exhibition will take place in Riga, from November 4 – December 11, 2011 in KIM? / RIXC Gallery, Contemporary Arts Center venue at Spikeri (http://www.kim.lv). ------------------------------------------------------------------ * Conference CALL: In relation to the theme proposed above, for the Techno-Ecologies conference we welcome proposals by by both – academic researchers and artists, as well as scientists, technology researchers, sociologists, philosophers, architects, designers, futurists, and other lateral thinkers, who are engaged with the issues of social and ecological sustainability, and are interested in a deeper understanding of technology. Please send your short abstract (ca. 200 words) and bio (ca. 60 words) to e-mail: <rixc (at) rixc.lv> and / or <rasa (at) rixc.lv> (Rasa Smite) The DEADLINE for conference abstracts: October 1, 2011 The conference is 2-day international academic event that takes place in Riga, November 4 - 5, 2011 (at RIXC Media Space), co-organized by RIXC and MPLab (Art Research Lab) of Liepaja University. The conference papers and thematically related articles after the conference will be published in the next issue (No. 11) of Acoustic Space, peer-reviewed journal for transdisciplinary research on art, science, technology and society. ------------------------------------------------------------------ * Preliminary programme: November 3, 2011 – Opening of the Art+Communication festival and the exhibition. November 4 – 5, 2011 – 2-day conference. November 4 – December 11, 2011 – Techno-Ecologies exhibition open for public. November 7 – 13, 2011 – follow-up events: iWeek workshops and public lectures in Liepaja. ------------------------------------------------------------------ * Organisers: The festival and the exhibition is organized by RIXC, The Center for New Media Culture http://rixc.lv The exhibition is co-curated by Raitis Smits, Rasa Smite and Eric Kluitenberg. The international academic conference is organized by RIXC in collaboration with MPLab (Art Research Lab) of Liepaja University http://mplab.lv ------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------ * Concept: TECHNO-ECOLOGIES Inhabiting the deep technological spheres of everyday life Technology can no longer be understood as an alterity (otherness) that stands in opposition to biological and social relationships. Going about our regular practices of everyday living we inhabit complex technological spheres of life that require a different, a more 'ecological' understanding of our relationship to technology. In analogy to the 'deep ecology' movement, philosopher David Rottenberg recently suggested that the notion of 'deep technology' relates user and context in an ecological, symbiotic way [1]. Similarly, the idea of 'inhabiting' technological ecologies emphasises our connectedness to our environment (material, natural, technological) and our dependence on the resources available in that environment (material, energetic, biological, cultural). Mastering these conditions, which necessarily transcend the personal experience, is vital to our survival on this planet. The concept of technological ecologies as spheres of life invites a more careful consideration of the relationships between the natural and the artificial - or even the collapse of the boundaries between them - in favour of looking at such techno-ecologies as complex assemblages, comparable to how for instance philosopher Bruno Latour treats them. Our perspective should, however, not be limited to these technological 'actors'. In The Three Ecologies (1989) Felix Guattari expresses his worries about the intense techno-scientific transformations the Earth is undergoing. Guattari observes an ecological disequilibrium generated by these transformations, which leads to a general reduction of human and social relationships and the sustainability of the living environment. According to Guattari it is the relationship between subjectivity and its exteriority - be it social, animal, vegetable or cosmic - that is compromised, in a sort of general movement of 'implosion'. He warns against a merely partial realisation of the severity of these changes and inadequate responses that may come from a purely technocratic perspective. It is the ways of living on this planet that are in question, according to Guattari, in the context of the acceleration of techno-scientific mutations and exponential demographic growth. Only an 'ethico-political' articulation 'between' the three ecological registers that he identifies - the environment, social relations, and human subjectivity - would be able to clarify these questions. The paradox is that these techno scientific transformations are both the source of the current ecological disequilibrium, and even so the only realistic means to address and potentially resolve the problems they create. Somehow, however, we cannot seem to make them work. Siegfried Zielinski has pointed out that one important fallacy to overcome is to view the course of technological development as 'progress', or to consider our current state of technological sophistication as the best possible and necessary outcome of a predictable historical trajectory. In his 'Variantology' project Zielinski makes a radical break with any idea of technological progress or determinism [2]. The Variantological approach emphasises that at any point technological development (and human development along with it) is contingent (it can go anywhere). Variantology does not look for 'master media' or 'imperative vanishing points'. Instead it seeks out the moments of greatest possible diversity and individual variation. It operates in carefully chosen periods of particularly intensive and necessary work on the media,# across different cultural and physical geographies - exploring the 'deep time relationships of the arts, sciences and technologies'. Finally, an exploration of inhabitable technological ecologies needs to take into account the phantasmatic dimension of technological apparatuses and systems. Such a more psychographic understanding of the depth of technology aims to uncover hidden, or not immediately visible or discernible psychological layers attached to the technological apparatuses - perhaps we might refer to this as a 'technological unconscious' - that underpin human experience and our subjective ties with technological environments. It considers technology not only as an extension of the body but also as an extension of our deepest desires. It explores the void between the 'real' and that what is mediated by systems of language, media, and technology. It acknowledges the existence of a 'third body' (Klaus Theweleit) [3] that inserts itself between us and the (technological) objects. This third body only emerges in our interaction with these objects, but it is neither held by us nor by the objects alone. Beyond questions of finite resources and obvious forms of pollution and environmental degradation, attempts to develop sustainable relationships with technology and our living environment should take into account far more complex layerings of the way we inhabit our current technological ecologies. Such a deeply informed ethical and philosophical perspective is indispensable if we hope to find less hazardous routes into the future. Notes: 1 - www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.10/rothenberg.if.html 2 - http://entropie.digital.udk-berlin.de/wiki/Variantology 3 - www.debalie.nl/player/balieplayerpopper.jsp?movieid=93125&videofragmentsid=ank2 Eric Kluitenberg, Amsterdam, June 6, 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------ http://rixc.lv/11 ------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
