Keywords | Year | Type |
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All Film Installation Lecture Performance | All 2015 2016 | All Artists/speakers Masterclasses News Panel Programme Static pages Two columns Wide page |
Katrina Burch: Paradigm patching in the analogic cockpit — Presentation on Synthesis with/by Yoneda Lemma Dust
Sunday 28 February
12:00 - 13:00
De Brakke Grond
Yoneda Lemma
The coming techno-sapiens’ living body never listens alone. It traverses cosmically low. And wide enough, to pulse in flowering nonhuman drones, and to array purple-shifting antibodies for transcendental immanence. Twisting sonorously around is a universe-fountainhead bringing techno-sapien consciousness ponderously forth in the stream of Xenoic growing pains, to a tasty ‘mission-balance’ at the edge of Outer-Darkness. We will investigate navigational schemes that become hitched at the xenotype– – by xenoplot carriers, recoding technological blasts from the future, and quasi-causally upgrading consciousness through spaces of abstraction. A primary focus will be on concept formation, (what is, how to) for Time, Feminism, and Sound: to think time cunningly; to invent Xenofeminism and philosophies of erotics; and to diagram methodologies for thinking sound archaeologically. Paradigm patching in the analogic cockpit… Our every attempt to objectify will be folded back into the fabrics of fabulation (as part of the reproductive weaving procedure). Keys: Sadie Plant, Nick Land, Reza Negarestani, Laboria Cuboniks, Shulamith Firestone, Monique Wittig, Edward C. Harris, Sarah Kember, Denis Smalley, Kodwo Eshun, Guerino Mazzola, eldritch Priest, Marc Couroux, Maryanne Amacher, & Sun Ra.
Yoneda Lemma & Anna Mikkola
Saturday 27 February
20:45 - 21:15
Paradiso, Main Hall
Yoneda Lemma (aka You Need a Lemon, sometimes Yoni Dilemma) is a quasi-causal brainchild for abstract exploration, experimental research, and a platform for productions, plotted by Canadian-born archaeologist, composer/producer and feminist thinker, Katrina Burch. Artist and curator Anna Mikkola’s audiovisual performances engage with the tensions between humans, nature and technology.