Tomorrows
Urban fictions for possible futures

Call for works
Deadline: 2 December 2016

How will everyday life evolve in the cities of tomorrow? What kind of
changes will smart systems, technologies of automation and constant
connectivity bring? Which new economic models might emerge and what
will the role of the particularities of different geographical areas
be? How will the development of the future cities affect the
environment and the natural resources of the planet?

The future today seems to be closer than ever. A new way of living has
already emerged based on the constant aggregation and processing of
data. Nonhuman factors, like the algorithms, have been introduced in
models for smarter cities and smarter homes, promising the constant
optimization of a city's functioning and of citizens' everyday life.
While the mediation of technology is, indisputably, of central
importance when discussing the future of the urban environment, at the
same time the following needs to be pointed out: Projections to the
future usually refer mostly to economically advanced metropolises or
to urban centers with no local features attributed to them. The
different geographical particularities, the local economies and the
dynamic of citizens' involvement are, for instance, often left out,
shaping an image for tomorrow's cities, which is inevitably
generalized and idealized.

The exhibition Tomorrows will aim to capture the urban future through
different utopian and dystopian scenarios being developed by artists,
architects and designers, opening up to territories with different
possibilities and needs. Real cities projected into the future, city
models that will never be built and hypothetical cityscapes will come
together to tell stories about the upcoming economic, social and
environmental conditions. New urban skylines, infrastructures, tools,
wearables and everyday objects will become the starting point for
unexpected or purposefully exaggerated stories, where the future is
used as a tool that can assist in critically understanding present
itself.

Part of the exhibition will focus on the Mediterranean, a region
summarizing the crisis of the western world. Struck by the ongoing
financial crisis and affected by mass population movements and climate
change, the area is going through transformations affecting both the
natural and the urban environment. The exhibition will examine how the
future of the Mediterranean might evolve, imagining what, for
instance, the role of the smart systems, biometric technologies and
network infrastructures will be.

The open call of the exhibition focuses on projects addressing the
future of the Mediterranean cities. It involves existing projects as
well as new proposals for works referring - without being limited - to
objects, systems, infrastructures and environments It welcomes
visionary ideas for alternative futures as well as reflective
responses for phenomena of the present.

Submissions will need to include the following:
    *    Description of the project (250 words max)
    *    Technical and exhibition requirements
    *    4-6 images or drawings
    *    List of people involved and credits
    *    Links related to the work - if any
    *    Credits
    *    Contact details (email, phone, postal address)
    *    Short bio of the creator or the group (up to 150 words)

Material will need to be submitted in a single PDF, not exceeding 3
MB.
All texts will need to be written in English.

Submissions will need to be sent to tomorr...@sgt.gr by 2 December
2016.
Notifications regarding the selection will be sent by 16 January 2017.
For more information use the above email address.

More info regarding the exhibition will be uploaded on the website
http://tomorrows.sgt.gr/en/ [1].

The exhibition will open in May 2017 in Athens, Greece.

Organized by: Onasssis Cultural Center / Christos Carras
Curated by: Daphne Dragona, Panos Dragonas
Designed by: Panos Dragonas, Varvara Christopoulou


Links:
------
[1] http://tomorrows.sgt.gr/en/

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