Editorial Team: Flóra Barkóczi, Geert Lovink, Áron Lődi, Diana McCarty, Zsolt 
Miklósvölgyi and János Sugár.

Embracing the legacy of the three MetaForum conferences (1994-96), MFX 
continues to highlight the urgent issues of the times with a reflection on 
contemporary crisis surfing. The theme of PermaCrises examines the persistent 
breakdown of our political, societal and cultural systems, capturing the 
extremity of this situation through its continuality and pervasiveness.

The unique political climate of East-Central Europe, situated in a 
semi-periphery, generates a perspective that often feels overlooked and 
stagnant. In the nineties, Hungary provided a useful lens with which to view 
emerging social, political and technical realities – almost in slow motion – as 
they came into being. In keeping with this, this event seeks dust of that lens 
with a view that underscores the regional context, fostering dialogues about 
the cultural dynamics of the immediate environment, influenced by and 
influencing global tendencies. While some speak of a ‘stack of crises’, others 
use terms such as polycrisis and metacrisis. Permacrisis emphasizes time: a 
neverending end. It questions how to confront crises such as the hot wars in 
Ukraine or Gaza, or the warm wars across the global south, the rise of 
right-wing populism worldwide, the impending environmental catastrophe, and the 
growing social disparities globally. None of these crises can be separated from 
the current ascent of technocracy or the exploitative nature of digital 
capitalism.

In October 1994, the inaugural MetaForum significantly impacted media art, 
activism and discourse within Hungary, across East-Central Europe and points 
further West. Organized by the Media Research Foundation in cooperation with 
the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in Budapest, it was conceived of and 
realized by Geert Lovink, Diana McCarty, and János Sugár. This series of three 
yearly conferences transformed the scope of media art events and gained a 
special notoriety. It sparked vital discussions and collaborations, blending 
media criticism, tactical media, and cultural exchanges between East and West.  
As the 30th anniversary draws near, we are excited to announce MetaForumX, set 
for October 2024. This edition promises to tackle the critical issues of our 
era, focusing on the deep influence of digital technology on art, culture, and 
societal frameworks.

Over three days, MetaForumX will merge presentation formats and topics 
featuring younger voices that are engaged with current issues and reconnecting 
with original participants from the series with in-depth lectures, discussions 
and screenings. The urgent concerns of young people bridging generational 
knowledge and fostering ongoing dialogue for a sustainable and inclusive future.

Day 0, 24 October 2024

18:00 Finissage at T+U’s exhibition at Trafó Gallery. Guided tour by Zsolt 
Miklósvölgyi and Márió Nemes Z.

Day 1, 25 October  2024 – ‘Conference Day’ at Trafó

09:30-10:00 Registration

10:10-10:30 Welcome and Introduction by Flóra Barkóczi

10:30 – 12:00 Session 1: Sources of the Permanent Crises (presentations + 
discussion) moderated by János Sugár

Sanja Sekelj: Reconsidering the Crisis and the Art System: Structures and 
Narratives of and about CEE Cultural Actors in the 1990s and Early 2000s from a 
CEE Perspective

This contribution aims to offer a historical and spatially determined account 
of the structure of the global art system between 1991 and 2006, and of the 
position of Central-East European (CEE) cultural actors within it. Network 
analysis is conducted on the dataset constructed based on art criticism 
published in Croatia, resulting in collaborative and co-occurrence networks of 
artists and art institutions. Apart from offering a broader insight into their 
structural positions, the contribution delves deeper into specific relations of 
CEE cultural actors, to discern nuanced narratives that followed their 
participation in exhibition activities. Despite showing efforts of individual 
actors to reshape relations within the art system, the constructed dataset 
primarily offers the possibility of a better understanding of its underlying 
structures, and their durability, thus facilitating a shift from perceiving 
crisis as an isolated event to understanding it as intrinsic context.

Dušan Barok:  Artist Organising and Para-Institutional Practices in the 
Semiperiphery

While platforms have become a dominant contemporary mode of value extraction 
and exploitation, they have also proliferated as a mode of social organization, 
alliance-building and public action. Bridging people and services, onsite and 
online, acting and archiving, they provide a flexible topology for collective 
agency. In this contribution, I will situate and compare several artist-run 
foundations and societies that were active in the region alongside the Media 
Research Foundation in the 1990s, and try to draw parallels and contrasts with 
artists organizing around platforms today.

Ágnes Básthy: Crisis of What? – Taking a Suspicious Walk around our Fashionable 
Notions

This presentation is an invitation for a collective thought walking around our 
useful and less useful but often used notions and concepts. I would like to 
present how fixation on crisis-based and fearful thinking is dispossessing or 
at least distancing us from the core questions of what we think about chaos and 
order, what we think about power and who and how exerts it in our world today. 
How can we reclaim our power and hereupon our autonomy? What are the 
consequences that the notion of crisis being appropriated and incorporated into 
managerialism and governmentality? How is this shaping our experiences, 
attitudes and thinking about the recent constellation of technology, 
capitalism, power and consequently our future? What kind of roles do our 
frequently used notions have in this all? Take an imaginary walk with me in the 
company of some of the most important contemporary thinkers.

12:00-13:00 Lunch Break at Trafó’s Café

13:00 – 15:00 Session 2: From the Representation of Crises to the Crisis of 
Representation (presentations + discussion) moderated by Geert Lovink

Vanda Sárai: Virtual Bodies, Virtual Threats? On Online Violence and Real-Life 
Anxieties

In my presentation, Virtual bodies, virtual threats? On online violence and 
real-life anxieties, I’d like to reflect on the ever gloomier nature of social 
media presence and its offline consequences, taking into consideration the 
content creators and the behavior of their audiences, as well. As a starting 
point, I’ll elaborate on Amalia Ulman’s Instagram performance, Excellences and 
Perfections (2014): the work – which can also be described as a hoax – 
reflected on the twisted ways of how femininity is presented and commented on 
online, and while monitoring the audience’s reactions, Ulman also painted a not 
so flattering picture of the double standards users  (but especially women) 
face in social media every day.

Even though the performance can be regarded as ancient if we consider the speed 
digital culture is transforming, its main sources of inspiration remain 
distressingly valid: putting ourselves out there, building our personal brand 
and – in general – being extremely online are all necessary elements of the 
hustle to make it, while the mental burden of dealing with trolls and real or 
virtual threats are all deemed to be integral parts of the job. To use Lauren 
Berlant’s term, our whole social media presence is permeated by cruel optimism. 
By drawing on some recent examples of pop culture, digital culture and 
Hungarian public discourse, I’d like to shed light on the inherent anomalies of 
our online presence, showcase some menacing trends arising with new 
technologies and pose the question of responsibility when it comes to 
forecasting and preventing real-life dangers.

Szilvi Német: Military Influencers in Peace Camp Hungary™. LARPing the War – 
But Standing Out of It

Political action today is often compared to cosplay, a form of costumed 
roleplay where participants don disguises to create the illusion of taking 
action, all while no longer believing in the possibility of effecting real 
change. In my presentation, I apply the term "LARPing" to the strategies of the 
Hungarian Defense Ministry, which has recently emerged as a major producer of 
military-themed entertainment in a country that fashions itself as an island of 
peace. Fidesz won the elections by pledging that no troops or arms will be sent 
to Ukraine, still the character of the soldier is being hyped up in an endless 
stream of #miltok influencer videos to military endorsed reality tv. While 
avoiding involvement in the most pressing regional conflict, these productions 
invite everyday citizens and celebrities to participate in a low-stakes media 
spectacle, where they act out military scenarios on training grounds in 
pristine outfits.

Constant Dullaart: Open-Sourced Iconoclasm

In an era marked by post-truth narratives and a pervasive sense of iconoclasm, 
artist Constant Dullaart explores the critical role of open-source AI in 
reshaping our cultural landscape. As photography—once a trusted medium for 
capturing reality—loses its credibility due to deepfakes and manipulated 
images. Dullaart argues that open-source AI serves as a counterbalance to the 
escalating commodification of information, offering a framework for 
collaborative artistic practice that prioritizes accessibility and ethical 
engagement.

Charlotte Eifler: Utopia Feeds Machines – On Alternate Worldings 

This contribution is about practices of creating and imagining alternate 
worldings. Based on Eifler's works Feminism is Browser, Pattern Thieves, 
Archival Grid and Eyes in Flux it will take us into queer, community based Sci 
Fi narratives. Moving from the grid as a cultural technique and an interaction 
between imaging technologies and mathematical, topographical, geographical, and 
governmental knowledge, you will encounter corporeal approaches to digital 
archives and magical quantum leaps in European museum landscapes.

15:00 – 15:30 Coffee Break

15:30 – 17:00

Session 3: Technopolitics of Planetary Computation and Beyond (presentations + 
discussion) moderated by Zsolt Miklósvölgyi

Boldizsár Hordós: Naked Logic: Black Boxes and Eternal Computation

​​This presentation is a brief introduction to non-symbolic computational 
design. With the advance of information technology computer systems evolved 
from analogue ballistic calculators and noisy, room-sized machines to an almost 
ethereal network of digital devices, a complex tissue of distributed hardware 
and increasingly monopolistic software. This evolution is rooted in a strictly 
goal-oriented approach to craft an algorithm, as a mirror image or 
transmutation of the universal laws that ordain the behavior of things within 
the world. By separating elemental functions from their informational context, 
embodied computation offers an alternative path. It serves as a flexible, 
inventive toolkit for object design, engineering and architecture. It could 
also make media art less boring.

András Cséfalvay: Re-Imagined Space Exploration – Evolutionary History of the 
Call to Fly, Rise Above. Geopolitics of Extinction Angst and New Cosmologies

RISE is an initiative and at the same time an artistic project aimed at 
including non-dominant stakeholders in shaping humanity's future as an 
interplanetary species. In contrast to the colonial narratives of dominant 
Eastern and Western powers, RISE advocates for space exploration as a 
collaborative, cultural effort. It reflects on the influence of Eastern 
European conceptual art, science fiction, and the evolution of flight on these 
ideas, while raising the question: Do we all possess an ancestral pre-dry-land 
memory that drives us to rise above the surface? Ultimately, the goal is to 
develop an applied mythology—stories that inspire new technologies and avoid 
the pitfalls of space colonization.

Juli Laczkó: All Computers are Broken. Rethinking the Technosphere Along the 
Lines of Repair and Maintenance Work

Broken world thinking suggests that breakdown, dissolution, and change, rather 
than innovation, development, or design as conventionally practiced and thought 
about should be the key themes and problems facing new media and technology 
scholarship today. According to Jackson’s Rethinking Repair, breakdown, 
maintenance, and repair constitute crucial but vastly understudied sites or 
moments within the worlds of new media and technology today. Repair is a side 
or moment of technological life that goes for the most part unrecognized. 
Thinking through the life of technological objects in terms of repair labor 
informs us about new media in uncharted or unchartable ways. What are the 
social determinations enacted through the life of technological objects, and 
how can we unravel them? 

Following up on Jackson’s broken world theory, I propose that the understanding 
of the work rendered invisible under our normal modes of picturing and 
theorizing technology cannot be described by the usual methodologies of those 
same theories. Instead, it’s Anna Tsing’s feminist anthropology that may 
provide a more porous and fluid model to understand relations of repair and 
maintenance work. In the Mushroom at the End of the World, On the Possibility 
of Life in Capitalist Ruins, Tsing proposes a methodology of research that is 
informed by the life cycles of matsutake mushrooms. She disregards established 
dictionaries and methods of research in favor of centering temporality, 
assemblages, and the art of noticing.  My latest work, ‘Where we’re at’, aims 
to be informed by Tsing’s methodology, reflecting on the similarities and 
differences between the global e-waste crisis and a specific local tradition of 
precarious survival in Eastern Europe. I claim that informal and temporal 
scavenging is specialist skilled labor that sustains not only those who perform 
it, but also the power structures that they are subjected to.

18:00 – 19:30 Screening and discussion event at MKE Intermedia Department + Q&A 
with Oleksiy Radynski about Where Russia Ends, 25 mins (dir. Oleksiy Radynski). 
More info: https://www.sheffdocfest.com/film/where-russia-ends. Trailer: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMoPtP_5EBk

Day 2: October 26, 2024 – ‘Forum Day’ at Trafó

10:00 – 11:30 Session 4: Beyond the Institutional System – Cultural Work in the 
Era of PermaCrisis

Sepp Eckenhaussen: ​​Art in Permacrisis: Organizing Art Workers in the World 
Beyond Art
This contribution explores the desire for economically sustainable art 
circulation. Can we imagine a sustainable art economy beyond precarity? How 
would this change the circulation of art works, the curriculum of art and 
design academies, the exhibition programs of museums, and the organization of 
collectives and unions?

In the context of the permacrisis, this feels like a daunting, if not futile 
issue to take on. Surely, the economy of the arts is notoriously unsustainable. 
But aren’t there many undeniably more relevant crises? However, permacrisis and 
the arts are deeply connected, already by the inescapable shadow of more urgent 
matters cast on the question of a ‘fair’ art economy. The precarious social 
legitimacy of art puts it at the mercy of crisis management, which in turn 
leads to the instrumentalization of art in fighting other crises.

Let’s unpack this complex relation between art and permacrisis layer by layer, 
and see where it leaves us. Should we maybe, once again, declare the end of art 
– this time, not as a fulfillment of the dialectics of history, but as a minor 
casualty to the permacrisis? Should we continue to try and prove the ‘real’ 
value of art as an important part of national identities, an essential part of 
Bildung, a comforting refuge, or a catalyst of critical reflection? Or should 
we fully embrace creative industries politics, which proposes art and culture 
as a profitable and ‘impactful’ endeavor for the ‘social good’. In this 
narrative, after all, art finds economic leverage by acting as a crisis solver. 
The larger the crisis, the more we need art?

This presentation is followed by a discussion, moderated by Zsolt Miklósvölgyi. 
With Sepp Eckenhaussen from INC, Amsterdam, Sanneke Huisman from LI-MA, 
Amsterdam, Tjaša Pogačar from ŠUM, Ljubljana (via Zoom) and Róna Kopeczky from 
Easttopics & Secondary Archive, Budapest.

11:30 – 12:30 Session 5: Red Forest (Mijke van der Drift, David Muñoz Alcántara 
& Diana McCarty) – in conversation with Szabolcs Kisspál

12:30 – 14:00 Lunch Break

14:00 – 15:00 Session 6: Aims and Relevance of MetaForum – Then (1994-1996) and 
Now
Round Table with Geert Lovink, Diana McCarty, János Sugár, moderated by Flóra 
Barkóczi

15:00 – 15:30 Coffee break

15:30 – 16:30 Session 7: Discussion with Roman Dziadkiewicz of UKRAiNATV 
(Krakow), Gytis Dovydaitis and Adomas of 3022 (Vilnius) and students of the 
Budapest Intermedia Dept. about the newly founded Stream Art Network, moderated 
by Geert Lovink

16:30 – 17:30 Final discussion about contemporary arts, the digital condition 
and the perma crisis, in Hungary, the region, Europe and beyond

18:00 onwards: closing event at MKE Intermedia Department

Stream Art Network LIVE with UKRAiNATV web streaming network, with onsite and 
remote contributions from Krakow, Kyiv and elsewhere, including a conversation 
between Szabolcs Kisspál and Geert Lovink & sound performance of Dániel 
Kophelyi and Ádám Jeneses

Venues and Information
Conference program at Trafó House of Contemporary Arts (Liliom u. 41). Evening 
programs at MKE – Hungarian University of Fine Arts – Intermedia Department 
(Kmety György u. 27). Please write for more information to 
<[email protected]>.  The event is free to enter.

Biographies:

Flóra Barkóczi
Flóra Barkóczi is an art historian working at the Central European Research 
Institute for Art History – Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest, Hungary. From 2018 
to 2022, she worked at the Artpool Art Research Center. Since 2020, she has 
been a PhD fellow in the Film, Media, and Cultural Theory Doctoral Program at 
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. Her research focuses on the role of 
technological mediums in post-1960s avant-garde art in the East-Central 
European region, with an emphasis on conceptual photography from the 1960s and 
70s, (new) media art from the 1980s and 90s, Internet-based art practices, 
1990s Internet culture, and contemporary photo-based art practices. Since 2024 
she has been a lecturer at the Intermedia Department at the Hungarian 
University of Fine Arts.

Dušan Barok
Dušan Barok's work is concerned with digital culture, memory and activism. He 
is founding editor of Monoskop, a wiki for arts and studies. Recently, together 
with Ivana Rumanová, he organized the exhibition programme *We Have Never Been 
Closer* at tranzit.sk in Bratislava, presenting contemporary artistic responses 
to the transformation period of the 1990s in Central Europe; was part of the 
curatorial team and contributed an essay to the catalogue of the touring 
exhibition *Multiple Realities: Experimental Art in the Eastern Bloc, 
1960s-1980s*, organized by the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; and prepared a 
"Monoskop" exhibition for Kunstraum Lakeside in Klagenfurt, entitled *Read 
Write Run*, dealing with the themes of community servers, shadow libraries, 
permacomputing and cyberfeminism.

Ágnes Básthy
Ágnes Básthy is a PhD candidate in the Doctoral School of Sociology at Eötvös 
Lóránd University (ELTE), Budapest, Hungary and a lecturer at Rajk László 
College for Advanced Studies  Budapest, Hungary where she teaches social theory 
and biopolitics. Her doctoral research focuses on the transformation of the art 
field in Hungary after the regime change, analyzing the relationship between 
art, politics and social changes in a global context focusing on Eastern 
Europe. She has been working at the intersection of culture, sociology, and art 
for more than a decade as a researcher, critic, and organizer. As an 
independent publicist, she follows an interdisciplinary approach to 
interpreting contemporary art production in the context of recent cultural and 
social phenomena and tendencies.

András Cséfalvay
Visual artist, digital storyteller, musician and mytho-poet from Bratislava, 
and an Associate Professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bratislava, 
Co-Founder of the Digital Arts Platform. After studying painting and 
mathematics, he wrote his dissertation on the usefulness and reality of 
fiction. His interest is imbalances in the relationship between culture and 
technology, and political and ethical aspects of listening to nondominant 
voices in world interpretation.

Mijke van der Drift
Philosopher, performer and educator Mijke van der Drift works on ethics as a 
focal point in a multi-disciplinary research about social transformation. Van 
der Drift is a Research Tutor at the Royal College of Art, London. Mijke’ 
writing has appeared in Social Text, the Journal of Speculative Philosophy, 
Journal of Aesthetics and Culture, with Cambridge University Press, Routledge 
and many other outlets. Mijke van der Drift and Nat Raha co-authored Trans 
Femme Futures which comes out in November 2024 with Pluto Press. Van der Drift 
lives and works in London.

Constant Dullaart
Constant Dullaart (NL, 1979) lives and works in Amsterdam and Berlin. Exploring 
how social and cultural values reverberate in tools and technology, Dullaart 
creates works to emphasize an enjoyable friction between old and new, manual 
and automated, online and offline, real or not. He deconstructs and analyzes 
the specific human circumstances under which technological instruments are 
created, and how this influences the way the instruments are consequently used. 
Dullaart investigates these processes through creating his own ‘artisanal’ 
social media platform common.garden. Revisiting his research into neural 
networks, he probes how phenomena like glossolalia and apophenia can create a 
bridge between person and technology. Dullaart is a professor of Networked 
Materialities at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Nürnberg.

Sepp Eckenhaussen
Sepp Eckenhaussen is an arts researcher and organizer based in Amsterdam. He 
works at the Institute of Network Cultures and the St. Joost Academy of Art & 
Design. From 2020 until 2023, he co-directed the art workers organization 
Platform BK. 

Charlotte Eifler
Charlotte Eifler is an artist and filmmaker who explores the politics of 
representation in relation to technology. Her works in the fields of moving 
image, extended reality, installation and performance address the intersections 
of digitality, queerness, archival practices and speculative futures. Eifler's 
projects utilize experimental storytelling techniques to question existing 
power structures and imagine alternative forms of history production and social 
coexistence. A special focus is placed on the gaps within digital 
representation mechanisms, the material infrastructures of the internet, and 
the intertwined history of military, science, and art. Charlotte is a member of 
the networks unlearning canon _ intersectional teaching in Art & Design, 
Digital Critique, feat.fem, FACES – gender, art, technology und G-Edit. 
Charlotte Eifler has presented her works at various international venues, 
including the ACM Siggraph Art in Los Angeles, the Sapporo International Art 
Festival in Japan, Le Printemps de Toulouse France, IMPAKT Utrecht, the 
Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Art Basel, and the Haus der Kulturen der 
Welt in Berlin. Her works have also been featured in numerous international 
screenings. Residencies and scholarships have enabled her international 
research in Moscow, New York, Ghent, Mexico City and Paris among others.

Boldizsár Hordós
Born in 1991, Boldizsár Hordós earned his master’s degree from the Hungarian 
University of Fine Arts in 2016. He is currently a PhD student at the same 
institution and teaches computer history in the Intermedia Department.

Sanneke Huisman
Sanneke Huisman is an art historian, writer and curator with a focus on media 
art. She has been working as a freelance curator at LI-MA since 2013. Together 
with Marga van Mechelen, she is co-editor and author of A Critical History of 
Media Art in the Netherlands: Platforms, Policies, Technologies (Jap Sam Books, 
2019). Recent exhibitions she has curated include Ekstasis. A Universe of Light 
and Sound (Stedelijk Museum Schiedam, 2023), REBOOT. Pioneering Digital Art 
(LI-MA and Nieuwe Instituut, 2023) and Two Songs (Netherlands Pavilion, 15th 
Gwangju Biennale, 2024). Sanneke writes on contemporary art for magazines and 
museums, including Metropolis M and Centraal Museum Utrecht, and is a guest 
lecturer at various Dutch art academies and universities. She also works as an 
advisor for Cultuurloket DigitALL.

Ádám Jeneses
Ádám Jeneses, a.k.a. eden_jeneses is an artist and curator from Budapest. His 
primary focus is on sound art, performance, and site-specific installations. 
His fusion of sonic pieces inspired by noise and danger-music, olfactory 
interventions, and installations of found objects, explores the infrapolitics 
of overstimulating consumerism and authoritarianism. He is a co-founder of the 
experimental music duo with Daniel Varga, and the music group "2006" with 224 
and Omon Wynfryth. He is currently pursuing a DLA degree at the Hungarian 
University of Fine Arts.

Szabolcs Kisspál
His main field of interest is the intersection of new media, visual arts and 
social issues. He taught and held workshops and master classes in 11 countries 
(England, Austria, Czech Republic, United States, Estonia, Finland, France, 
Poland, Germany, Slovakia, Romania).  and he is currently an associate 
professor and head of the Intermedia Department at the HUFA Budapest. Works 
presented among others at the Venice Biennial, ISCP and Apexart New York, 
Stedelijk Museum, Seoul International Media Art Biennale, and further Hungarian 
and international festivals and various cultural venues. His works can be found 
in the collections of Ludwig Museum Budapest, Museum of National Contemporary 
Art Bucharest, Muzeum Współczesne Wrocław, Ostrobothnian Museum Vaasa, Kadist 
Art foundation – Paris, etc. Between 2012-15 he has been actively involved in 
various activist projects.
  Róna Kopeczky
Róna Kopeczky is a curator and art historian based in Budapest. Between 2006 
and 2015 she was a curator at the Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art in 
Budapest, where she focused on site- and situation-specific art practices of 
young and middle-generation artists from the Central and Eastern European 
region. Since 2015, she acts as the artistic director of acb Gallery in 
Budapest, and is an active contributor to the research programs and 
publications of Acb ResearchLab. She worked on the implementation of the first 
OFF-Biennále Budapest (2015) and joined the curatorial team of its second 
edition (2017). She is the co-founder and co-leader of the Easttopics platform, 
dedicated to representing the Central and Eastern European contemporary art 
scene. She was the curator of the 18th Tallinn Print Triennial, which ran in 
2022 with a Central-Eastern European focus, takes care of the Hungarian 
contributions to the Secondary Archive platform since 2020, and has been 
advisory curator for Central and Eastern Europe at Donumenta Regensburg public 
art program since 2022. She was the curator of the Hungarian Pavilion at the 
Venice Biennale in 2024. She received her PhD from the Sorbonne University in 
2013.

Juli Laczkó
Juli Laczkó is an intermedia artist engaged with critical research in visual 
arts and digital culture. She holds a practice-based doctoral degree from the 
Hungarian University of Fine Arts for her research on visual art and hacker 
culture. A monograph based on her doctoral dissertation titled The Art of 
Hacking: Strategic Interactions between Hacker Culture and Visual Arts was 
published in 2021. Her practice is informed by critical making, social divides, 
anti-patriarchal, feminist and post-Anthropocentric perspectives, articulating 
intermediality in space. Works of her hybrid practice of the material and the 
digital appeared internationally from Leipzig, Vienna, Budapest, Zagreb, 
Bratislava to Istanbul and the Nevada Desert in collective- and solo 
exhibitions. She lives in Amsterdam and teaches at the Image and Media 
Technology program at the Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht.

Áron Lődi
Áron Lődi is a visual artist and cultural organizer based in The Hague. His 
practice deals with the horrors of capitalism and the lingering shadows of 
imperialism through the lens of Europe’s east-west ideological divide. His work 
often focuses on Eastern Europe’s depiction as a construct lacking social and 
political transparency that is used to legitimize its “civilizing” through 
imperial soft power. He holds an MFA degree from the Dirty Art Department at 
Sandberg Instituut, Amsterdam. He is a founding member of the U&K Magazine 
publishing project and one-half of the artist duo Alagya. In 2022, He initiated 
a para-academic programme in Amsterdam, titled Contaminating The Soil That 
Nurtures Greed. His works have been shown at Semester9, Amsterdam (NL), Jedna 
Dva Tri Gallery, Prague (CZ), A Promise of Kneropy, Bratislava (SK), Vunu 
Gallery, Kosice (SK), Ultrastudio Gallery, Pescara (IT), and 1111 Gallery, 
Budapest (HU). In 2023, he was a fellow at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart.

Geert Lovink
Geert Lovink is a Dutch media theorist, internet critic and activist. His 
recent books: Organization after Social Media (with Ned Rossiter, 2018), Sad by 
Design (2019), Stuck on the Platform (2022) and Extinction Internet (2022). He 
studied political science at the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and received his 
PhD from the University of Melbourne. In 2004 he founded the Institute of 
Network Cultures at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (HvA). In 2022 
he was appointed Professor of Art and Network Cultures at the University of 
Amsterdam (UvA), art history department.

Diana McCarty
Feminist media activist Diana McCarty is a founding editor of reboot.fm, the 
award winning free artists’ radio in Berlin. She is a co-founder of the radio 
networks radia.fm and 24/3 FM Berlin; of the FACES (faces-I) online community 
for women; and of the elsewhere association. As a cyberpunk in the 1990s, she 
was active in independent internet culture with net.art, nettime, the MetaForum 
Conference Series, and different hacking spaces. Her work revolves around art, 
gender, politics, technology, media and  radical feminism. She was a 2019-2020 
BAK Fellow at basis voor actuele kunst, Utrecht and a KONE Research Fellow in 
2021 and in 2023-25. She shares a Professorship for Time Based Media and 
Performance at the HfG Karlsruhe with Filipa César. McCarty is a proud Chicana 
from Albuquerque. She lives and works in Berlin.

Zsolt Miklósvölgyi
​​Zsolt Miklósvölgyi is an editor and art writer based in Budapest, Hungary. He 
currently works as a curator at acb Gallery in Budapest. He is the co-founder 
of the Berlin-Budapest-based art collective and publishing project Technologie 
und das Unheimliche (T+U) He holds a Ph.D. in literary and cultural studies. He 
has been a visiting research fellow at the Humboldt University in Berlin, 
Germany; and at the Wirth Institute of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, 
Canada. In 2021, he was participating in the artist-in-residence program of 
Meetfactory Prague. In 2020, he was a literary fellow of the Visegrad Fund in 
Prague. Together with the T+U collective, he recently participated in a solo 
show at the Július Koller Society in Bratislava (2022), as well as in a group 
show at the ISKRA DELTA: The 34th Ljubljana Biennale of Graphic Arts (2021). 

David Muñoz-Alcántara
David Muñoz-Alcántara’s work intersects art, architecture, social sciences, and 
philosophy merged in collective constructions of autonomy. They focus on the 
revolutionary poetics of art grounded in people’s liberation struggles. Their 
work addresses the recovery of eco-social dignity with praxes of insurgent 
communalisms, fugitive power, transformative justice, and Indigenous futurity 
in defense of life. They are Guest Professor at the Media Faculty of Karlsruhe 
University of the Arts and Design (2024); Post-Doctoral researcher at the 
Social Sciences Faculty of Helsinki University (2023-2025); Research Fellow at 
BAK-Basis voor Actuele Kunst Utrecht (2019-2020); Visiting Researcher at 
Goldsmiths University of London (2016-2017); Doctor of Arts from Aalto 
University; and Architect from the National Autonomous University of México.

Szilvi Német
Szilvi Német is a journalist and media researcher. Since 2022, she has been 
working for Lakmusz.hu, a fact-checking and anti-disinformation site, where her 
focus is on gray zone media, coordinated inauthentic behavior, and influencer 
politics. Prior to this, she worked as an independent curator and as the 
director of the Crosstalk video and media art festival. Since 2019, she has 
been pursuing a PhD in the Film, Media, and Cultural Theory program at ELTE.Her 
research focuses on online political subcultures, the relationship between 
popular culture and politics, and network analysis. She co-authored the book 
'Toxic Technocultures and Digital Politics: Emotions, Memes, Data Politics, and 
Attention on the Internet' (Napvilág, 2021).

Tjaša Pogačar
Tjaša Pogačar, based between Ljubljana and Prague, is an independent curator of 
contemporary art and co-founder and editor-in-chief of ŠUM. She draws from 
gaming, literary fiction and theory to rethink exhibition-making as a 
collective worlding exercise, prototyping scenarios for a different reality 
than the socially, politically, and ecologically precarious one we have 
inherited. She worked as a curator of visual and new media art at Projekt Atol 
Institute (2021/24) and as a guest curator at Kunsthalle Bratislava (2022/23). 
She curated shows for SUMO Prague, 2023; viennacontemporary, 2022; 34th 
Ljubljana Biennale, 2021; International Festival of Computer Arts Maribor, 
2019–20; Museum of Contemporary Art Ljubljana, 2019, 2015; Aksioma and Škuc 
Gallery among others. Her writing on art has appeared in e-flux Art & 
Education, Tipping point, ETC magazine, Likovne Besede, Fotograf magazine, 
Polansky gallery and Karlin Studios Prague, and in publications of institutions 
such as L’Internationale/Valiz, Museum of Contemporary and Modern Art 
Ljubljana, P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E. Museum, and Kunsthalle Bratislava. She is currently 
pursuing a PhD at Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. 

Oleksiy Radynski
Oleksiy Radynski is a filmmaker and writer based in Kyiv. His films experiment 
with documentary forms and practices of political cinema. They have been 
screened at film festivals and in exhibition contexts worldwide, including 
International Film Festival Rotterdam, Oberhausen International Short Film 
Festival, the Institute of Contemporary Arts (London), e-flux (New York), 
Docudays (Kyiv), Sheffield Doc Fest, Krakow IFF, DOK Leipzig etc. His film 
Chornobyl 22 won the Grand Prix at Oberhausen International Short Film Festival.

Red Forest
RED FOREST is a research constellation activated by Oleksiy Radynski, David 
Muñoz-Alcántara, Diana McCarty and Mijke van der Drift. The name emerged during 
a research visit to the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Station in spring 2021. The 
reaction of the forest to Chornobyl's eco-disaster turned green trees red and 
the living to not-dead. Mindful of the response of the environment at a variety 
of scales, including the atomic, Red Forest alludes to this entanglement and 
resilience, reminding us of the responsibility to face the layers of life in 
our surroundings, whatever the circumstances. The constellation of Red Forest 
is not confined to a single discipline, but their work spans media theory, 
philosophy, anti-colonial praxis, queer theory, feminism, and contemporary 
critical theory, and their shared practices comprise architecture, radio, film, 
and performance. Red Forest work contributes to advancing the collective growth 
of eco-social dignity, recovery of insurgent-indigenous bonds and 
trans-futurisms. Red Forest convokes the radiation of resistance after the 
resistance to radiation.

Sanja Sekelj
Sanja Sekelj is a Research Associate at the Institute of Art History in Zagreb. 
Her research focuses on the art production of the second half of the 20th and 
the beginning of the 21st century, with a specialization in the research of 
international cultural relations in the late socialist period, as well as of 
the cultural dynamics and networking practices at the turn of the millennium. 

Vanda Sárai
Vanda Sárai is a Budapest-based independent curator, art writer and researcher. 
She completed her BA and MA studies in Budapest and Jena, and is currently 
working on her PhD at Eötvös Loránd University, focusing on the effects of 
attention economy and digital culture on contemporary art and its institutional 
system. She is a guest lecturer at the Art and Design Department of 
Metropolitan University Budapest. She was a member of the curatorial 
collective, Teleport Gallery (2016-2018). As a curator, she won the Esterházy 
Art Dating Prize and the MODEM Prize for Young Curators. Her most notable shows 
were: Time of Our Lives (co-curated with Tamás Don and Ferenc Margl), MODEM 
(2018); #IFeelSeen, MODEM (2021); WHAT THE RUG? Carpets in Hungarian 
contemporary art, 1111 (2023); I’m Afraid I Can Do That, TORULA (2023); Kádár 
Emese: NOT_FOUND, The Space Gallery (2024). Between 2017-2021, she worked in 
the editorial team of the Hungarian art magazine, Műértő. In 2022-2023, she was 
the gallery manager of the non-profit art space, 1111. She is a member of AICA 
Hungary.

János Sugár 
János Sugár studied sculpting at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in 
Budapest. Parallel with his studies, between 1980 and 1986 he was actively 
involved in the exhibitions and performances of Indigo, an interdisciplinary 
art group led by Miklós Erdély. Sugár has participated in national and 
international exhibitions since the mid 80s and his work includes 
installations, performances, film/video, as well as theoretical writing. In 
1992 he exhibited at the documenta IX, Kassel, in 1996 Manifesta I, Rotterdam. 
He completed an Artslink residency at the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1994, 
and in 1997/98 a four-month, and in 1999 a three-month fellowship at 
Experimental Intermedia in New York. His films were screened in 1998 at the 
Anthology Film Archives in New York. In 1990 he founded with Miklós Peternák 
the Intermedia Department of the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts, Budapest and 
he has been teaching art and media theory there since 1990. In 1994, 1995, and 
1996 he organized the MetaForum Conference Series with Geert Lovink and Diana 
McCarty. He resides in Budapest.














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