Ernestine Daubner on Sun, 30 Jul 2006 01:24:40 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime-ann> Call for Papers |
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Call for Papers for the colloquium
MOBILE/ IMMOBILIZED: Art, biotechnologies & (Dis)abilities Montréal, October 2007
Please submit, to the Centre Interuniversitaire
en arts médiatiques, <gram@uqam.ca>
- a short biography (15 lines) - an abstract of 250 words maximum before September 1 2006
“A human being would lack nothing, if one were to admit that there are a thousand ways to live.” Canguilhem Following the activities that took place within the framework of two
colloquia, "Interfaces et Sensoralité" (2003) and "Arts & Biotechnologies"
(2004), and based on the work with the handicapped conducted, over several
years, by the group at Cyprès in Marseille, we believe it is opportune to
provide a site for insightful reflections on questions relating to
(dis)abilities. At the intersection of several contemporary art projects,
bioscientific research and technological innovations, the notion of deficiency
seems to be one of the most fertile and troubling forces. It certainly has
a pronounced affect on the experimental art scene, where it generates a
significant array of creative, phantasmagorical and symbolic artworks.
Redesigning the Human
Indeed, it seems important, at the present time, to evaluate how
technologies and biotechnologies affect the condition of viability, of autonomy
and disability of people, and to observe any signs of evolution that signal an
increase in cognitive, mental, imaginary and symbolic capabilities.
All disciplines involved in the redesigning of the human being are included
within the framework of this colloquium. On the one hand, these
disciplines occupy the central stage, determining and illuminating the
orientation and objectives of the project Mobile / Immobilized, and on the other
hand, they serve as a gauge, allowing one to evaluate the techno-anthropological
and political impact of practices exerted by humans on humans.
The Augmented Body
Increasingly, technological developments give the impression that human
beings are inadequately equipped. This section of the colloquium concentrates on
artistic works whose orientation and experimental factors open up
conceptual possibilities as well as practical applications for people with
deficiencies or constraints (Virtual reality, biofeedback, motion captures,
interactivity, synthetic voices, sound, technological extensions, implants,
etc.)
Artworks will also be presented by people with disabilities who have,
because of their deficiencies and their differences, strengthened their
sensorial capabilities, and so produce unique poetic and phantasmagorical worlds
with technological tools (images, digital photographs, video…). Since such
works are adapted to particular disabilities, in certain cases they may result
in technical or technological solutions that offer potential uses for the
broader public.
Art as a Life Laboratory
The question here is the study of artistic approaches that propose an
important slippage towards a centre of gravity different from the site of
current art practices. It is a matter of considering new artworks and
artistic processes as cognitive tools, charged at one and the same time with an
emotion and with indissociable cognition, artworks that permit one to conceive
of strategies for inventive learning and adaptation in order to try to find new
symbolic and sensory forms.
These approaches permit one to redefine artistic activity in terms of the
laboratory of life by actively participating in the development of tools that
work for, and in concert with, handicapped persons. This can be done by
considering specific imaginaries, unique forms of creations and creativity, and
modes of global communication.
Artists, theorists, (bio)scientists, and (bio)engineers) working in related
fields are invited to present their artworks, ideas and research, as well as
certain developments and applications in this domain.
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