e-flux podcast

Collective Intelligence: Agnieszka Kurant, Tobias Rees, and Elvia Wilk (part 2/2)


Listen Later

Artist Agnieszka Kurant and researcher Tobias Rees in conversation with e-flux journal Contributing Editor Elvia Wilk.

 

Agnieszka Kurant explores how complex social, economic and ecological systems can operate in ways that confuse distinctions between fiction and reality or nature and culture. Probing collective intelligence, surveillance capitalism, AI and the evolution of culture, labor and creativity, she investigates automation, crowdsourcing and data exploitation in the context of art production. Her works often behave like living organisms, self-organized complex systems or bachelor machines. Her past projects include a commission for the façade of the Guggenheim Museum (2015) and a solo exhibition at the Sculpture Center, New York (2013). In 2010 she co-represented Poland at the Venice Biennale of Architecture. Her work was featured in exhibitions at Palais de Tokyo, Guggenheim Bilbao, Tate Modern, Witte de With, Moderna Museet, MUMOK, Bonner Kunstverein, The Kitchen, Frieze Projects and Performa Biennial. She is an artist in residence at MIT CAST and a fellow of the Smithsonian Institute and the Berggruen Institute.

Tobias Rees is the Reid Hoffman Professor of Humanities at the New School for Social Research, Director at the Los Angeles-based Berggruen Institute, and a Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.    Rees finds himself intrigued by situations that are not reducible to the already thought and known—by events, small ones or large ones, that set the taken for granted in motion and thereby provoke unanticipated openings for which no one has words yet. In his writings he seeks to capture something of the at times wild, at other times tender, almost fragile openness that rules as long as the new/different has not yet gained any stable contours—when it is pure movement.   Over the last decade his research has explored possibilities of practicing the human sciences after the figure of the human on which the human sciences (and art) has been contingent failed us: The human—the object of the human sciences is a figure not known before the late eighteenth century.    He is the author of Designs for an Anthropology of the Contemporary (2008), Plastic Reason (2016), and most recently of After Ethnos (2018).
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

e-flux podcastBy e-flux

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

47 ratings


More shows like e-flux podcast

View all
The Modern Art Notes Podcast by Tyler Green

The Modern Art Notes Podcast

476 Listeners

New Books in Critical Theory by Marshall Poe

New Books in Critical Theory

142 Listeners

London Review Bookshop Podcast by London Review Bookshop

London Review Bookshop Podcast

120 Listeners

Jacobin Radio by Jacobin

Jacobin Radio

1,401 Listeners

Hyperallergic by Hyperallergic

Hyperallergic

149 Listeners

The Week in Art by The Art Newspaper

The Week in Art

201 Listeners

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast by David Zwirner

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast

410 Listeners

The Great Women Artists by Katy Hessel

The Great Women Artists

517 Listeners

Theory & Philosophy by David Guignion

Theory & Philosophy

340 Listeners

The Art Angle by Artnet News

The Art Angle

315 Listeners

Acid Horizon by Acid Horizon

Acid Horizon

175 Listeners

Joshua Citarella by Joshua Citarella

Joshua Citarella

128 Listeners

A brush with... by The Art Newspaper

A brush with...

138 Listeners

Overthink by Ellie Anderson, Ph.D. and David Peña-Guzmán, Ph.D.

Overthink

372 Listeners

What's Left of Philosophy by Lillian Cicerchia, Owen Glyn-Williams, Gil Morejón, and William Paris

What's Left of Philosophy

253 Listeners