Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, presents:

Christoph Wachter and Mathias Jud
“…” 
an archeology of silence in the digital age

Solo exhibition

Curated by: Daphne Dragona

 

Aksioma | Project Space

Komenskega 18, Ljubljana, Slovenia

 

Exhibition opening and artist talk: Wednesday, 30 August 2017 at 8 pm

Open through: 29 September 2017

aksioma.org/archeology.of.silence <http://aksioma.org/archeology.of.silence/> 





“I have not tried to write the history of that language (A/N the language of 
psychiatry) but, rather, the archeology of that silence.” – M. Foucault, 
Madness and Civilization, 1961

In an era when connectivity is taken as a given, communication is often thought 
of as free and boundless. As network infrastructures increasingly disappear 
into the environment, to always be in touch has come to be felt as natural. 
Posts, chats, comments and multiple instant reactions shape an image of a space 
where communication is immediate, vivid and often noisy. But how accessible, 
inclusive and democratic is this space at the same time? Overwhelmed by the 
busyness and speed of today’s environments, seldom do we get to reflect upon 
recurring forms of exclusion and absence: What about voices that cannot be 
heard on “feeds” and streams of information? Who gets to speak? Who listens in 
and who remains silent?

Artists Christoph Wachter and Mathias Jud have been paying special attention to 
the different forms of silence that prevail on the Internet. With their work, 
they aim to undermine power structures while also developing tools and systems 
of communication for those in need. They uncover network mechanisms, expose 
cases of censorship and surveillance, and embrace infrastructural literacy as a 
response to the dominance of today’s network infrastructures. Minorities 
deprived of the possibility to connect, people fleeing in fear of being 
tracked, citizens suffering violent Internet black-outs, as well as users 
wishing to react to the constant capturing of their data are the ones the 
artists have been turning their attention to. In areas such as the suburbs of 
Paris, the island of Lesvos, the cities of the Arab Spring, even the very 
center of Berlin, they have worked alongside communities and activists to 
develop independent zones of communication that users themselves can control 
and sustain. Bringing back to the foreground what the 90s community network 
pioneers once called the “freedom to connect,” Wachter and Jud formulate 
possibilities for communication, opposing silence and exclusion. 

 

For the exhibition “…” an archeology of silence for the digital age, the 
artists have built a communication network similar to the ones they set up in 
the open space. Two network terminals and one mobile network unit, functioning 
independenty of the Internet are hosted in the show. Their distinctive 
tin-powered antennas held by minimal wooden structures allow the signal to 
reach great distances of connectivity. The mobile network unit – called “Gezi 
Park Edition” –  offers citizens and users the possibility to set up a local 
communication network anywhere and at any time. The visibility, materiality and 
tangibility of these infrastructures invite us to experience the aesthetic, 
technological and social elements that they involve. Viewing, accessing and 
trying out these counter-infrastructures, we get to join different zones of 
connectivity that remind us of the power asymmetries as well as of our very 
role and silence in the connected world.

​
​―

“…”
an archeology of silence in the digital age
Artist talk

“What does the war in Syria have to do with the privacy debate in Europe? What 
does NSA mass surveillance have to do with a Chinese Internet café? 

On the one hand, we have our own specific views. On the other hand, the forms 
of expression are subject to a collective political, cultural, governmental and 
linguistic regime. In order to overcome the forms of attribution, exclusion and 
paternalism in our own views and expressions, we specifically address the 
social and cultural mechanisms of exclusion in our art projects. Our projects, 
such as picidae (since 2007), New Nations (since 2009) and qaul.net 
<http://qaul.net>  (since 2012), have gained worldwide interest by 
revolutionizing communication conditions. As open-source projects these works 
uncover forms of censorship of the Internet, undermine the concentration of 
political power and even resolve the dependency on infrastructure. The tools we 
provide are used by communities and activists in the USA, Europe, Australia and 
in countries such as Syria, Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, India, China and Thailand. 
Even North Korean activists participate.

This talk is a tour d’horizont to the isolated and hidden depths. Particularly 
in the digital age we usually forget about the exclusion and the gaps because 
they don’t appear in our worldview. By looking into our communication 
conditions, we can realize new strategies and ways to reach out to eachother.” 
– Christoph Wachter & Mathias Jud

​―
​ 

TOOLS FOR THE NEXT REVOLUTION

Workshop (in the framework of the Mladi levi 
<http://www.bunker.si/eng/archives/17183>  festival)

 

Aksioma | Project Space

Komenskega 18, Ljubljana

 

Friday, 25 August 2017, 5 pm – 8 pm

 

The workshop is a journey into the possibilities of expression in the 
communication society and uncovers the narratives and power structures behind 
it. Participants will create their own Internet independent Wifi communication 
network, learn how to use it and how to extend the range of Wifi-networks with 
self-built antennas.





​Production of the exhibition: Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art, 
Ljubljana, 2017 

 

Artistic Director: Janez Janša 

Producer: Marcela Okretič 

Executive Producer: Sonja Grdina 

Public Relations: Alja Žorž 

Technician: Valter Udovičić 

Documentation: Jure Goršič (photo), Gregor Gobec (video)

The workshop TOOLS FOR THE NEXT REVOLUTION is realised in the framework of the 
Mladi levi festival in coproduction with Bunker, Ljubljana. 

 

The exhibition “…” an archeology of silence in the digital age and the workshop 
Tools for the Next Revolution are realised in the framework of the project 
State Machines, a joint project by Aksioma <http://aksioma.org/>  (SI), Drugo 
more <http://drugo-more.hr/en/>  (HR), Furtherfield 
<http://www.furtherfield.org/>  (UK), the Institute of Network Cultures (NL) 
and NeMe <http://www.neme.org/>  (CY). 

Supported by: the Creative Europe programme of the European Union, the  
<http://www.mk.gov.si/en/> Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia, the 
<http://www.ljubljana.si/si/mol/mestna-uprava/oddelki/kultura/>  Municipality 
of Ljubljana and Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia.

​​This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This 
communication reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot 
be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained 
therein.

 

 

 

Marcela Okretič

Aksioma | Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana

Jakopičeva 11, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia

 

Aksioma | Project Space

Komenskega 18, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia

tel.: + 386 – (0)590 54360

gsm: + 386 – (0)41 – 250830

e-mail: marc...@aksioma.org

www.aksioma.org

 

 

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