[rohrpost] Workshop: Art and Biotech, Montreal 5.-8. October
Ingeborg Reichle
Ingeborg.Reichle at culture.hu-berlin.de
Sam Sep 18 15:16:27 CEST 2004
Workshop: Art and Biotech, Montreal 5.-8. October
Organized by:
Louise Poissant, Professeur à l’UQAM
Ernestine Daubner, Université Concordia, chargée de cours. Responsable
de la section : Art génétique. Co-responsable de la préparation du
manuscrit et du DVD.
Christine Bernier, Musée d'art contemporain, responsable de la
logistique globale. Co-responsable de la préparation du manuscrit.
Biotechnologies announce the emergence of major breakthroughs and fresh
insights into various fields of knowledge in the near future: new
medical treatments, improvements in agriculture, the mapping of the
genomes of various species, the customized reconfiguration of bodies.
Such potent promises are both fascinating and disquieting, raising many
uncertainties and posing questions difficult to resolve. During this
colloquium, international theorists and artists will explore these
issues by presenting research and artworks situated at the intersection
of art, science and artificial systems.
Information:
http://www.colloquebioart.org/english.html
Programme du colloque: 5, 6, 7 et 8 octobre 2004
MARDI, LE 5 OCTOBRE 2004
9 h Accueil et inscription
10 h Mot de bienvenue
Louise Poissant (UQAM ) & Ernestine Daubner (Concordia)
Présentations d’ouverture :
Marc Mayer, Directeur Musée d’art contemporain (à confirmer)
Animatrice : Christine Bernier, Musée d’art contemporain
Sara Diamond, Artist; Banff Center
LIVING WITH THE ANIMALS
Louis Bec, Zoosystémicien, CYPRÈS
LEÇON D'ÉPISTÉÉMOLOGIE FABULATOIRE
12 h Lunch
14 h
RENCONTRE DU BIOLOGIQUE DE L'ESTHÉTIQUE ET DE L'ÉTHIQUE
INTERSECTIONS OF BIOLOGY, AESTHETICS AND ETHICS
Animateur : Shawn Bailey, Artist; Concordia
Stephen Wilson, Artist; San Francisco State University
POTENTIAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF BIOARTISTS TO RESEARCH
Lucia Santella, Université catholique de Sao Paulo
ART AND SCIENCE : THE CONTROVERSIAL FIELD OF BIOART
15 h 30 - 15 h 45 Pause
Annick Bureaud, Leonardo/Olats, Paris
LE VIVANT "MANIPULÉ" EN TANT "QU'OBJET" D'ART
Hervé Fischer, Artiste; UQAM, Montréal
LE MYTHE ET SES DOUBLES
18 h Cocktail
MERCREDI • WEDNESDAY 6 OCT 2004
8 h 30 Accueil
9 h VIE ARTIFICIELLE
ARTIFICIAL LIFE
Animatrice : Louise Poissant, UQAM, Montréal
Louis-Claude Paquin, UQAM, Montréal
LE CORPS AUGMENTÉ
Jean Décarie, UQAM, Montréal
LE CORPS COMME MEDIA : LE CAS DU BIOFEEDBACK
10 h 30 - 10 h 45 Pause
Guy Théraulaz, Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse
INSECTES SOCIAUX : CONCEPTION PAR ASSEMBLAGE
Éric Bonabeau, Icosystem Corporation, Cambridge, USA
EXPLORATORY DESIGN OF COLLECTIVE PATTERNS
12 h Lunch
14 h
Animatrice : Nicolas Reeves, Artiste; UQAM, Montréal
Nell Tenhaaf, Artist; York University, Toronto
ARTIFICIAL AGENCY
Ken Rinaldo, Artist; The Ohio State University, Colombus
ARTIFICIAL LIFE, INTELLIGENCE AND SYMBIOSIS
15 h 30 - 15 h 45 Pause
Eduardo Reck Miranda, University of Plymouth, UK
ARTIFICIAL LIFE MUSIC
Julien Nembrini, EPFL, Toulouse
INTELLIGENCE COLLECTIVE POUR ROBOT MULTI-CELLULAIRE
18 h Soirée
JEUDI • THURSDAY LE 7 OCT 2004
8 h 30 Accueil
9 h
ART GÉNÉTIQUE • HYBRIDES
GENETIC ART • HYBRIDS
Moderator : Ernestine Daubner, Concordia University, Montreal
George Gessert, Artist
ANTHROPOCENTRISM AND GENETIC ART
Bioteknica (Shawn Bailey & Jennifer Willet, Artists; Concordia University)
3D ORGANIC TISSUE PROTOTYPES (SOFT SCULPTURES)
10 h 30 – 10 h 45 Pause
Adam Zaretsky, Artist; Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY
pFARM : ORGANIC BIOTECHNOLOGY AND POWER FARMING
Roy Ascott, Artist; University of Plymouth,UK
MOIST MEDIA AND MEDIATED MIND
12 h Lunch
14 h Animatrice : Christine Palmiéri, UQAM, Montréal
THE TISSUE CULTURE & ART PROJECT : Oron Catts & Ionat Zurr), Artists;
University of Western Australia
TISSUE TECHNOLOGIES FROM AN ARTISTIC PERSPECTIVE
Diana Dominigues, Artist; Université de Sao-Paulo
EXCHANGES OF ELECTRIC HUMAN SIGNALS IN ARTISTIC IMMERSIVE POETICS
15 h 30 - 15 h 45 Pause
Ted Krueger, Architect; Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY
SYNTHETIC SENSES : AN APPROACH TO AN EXPERIMENTAL EPISTEMOLOGY
Eduardo Kac, Artist; The School of the Art Institute of Chicago
GFP BUNNY
17 h Vernissage
VENDREDI • FRIDAY 8 OCT 2004
9 h REPRÉSENTATIONS ET STRATÉGIES CRITIQUES
CRITICAL AND REPRESENTATIONAL STRATEGIES
Animatrice : Dalia Chauveau, Artiste, UQAM, Montréal
Ellen K. Levy, Artist; Brooklyn College
ART AND THE BIOTECH INDUSTRY: ADAPTATION AND INNOVATION
Joe Davis, Artist; MIT
DNA MANIFOLDS
10 h 30 - 10 h 45 Pause
Charles Halary, UQAM, Montréal
FUSION ENTRE ÉLECTRONIQUE ET BIOTECHNOLOGIE
Suzanne Anker,
REPROTECH: BUILDING BETTER BABIES?
12 h Lunch
14 h Animatrice : Christine Bernier, Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal
Olliver Dyens, Université Concordia, Montréal
LE CORPS NUMÉRISÉ : CHIRURGIE ESTHÉTIQUE ET CHAIR SANS MÉMOIRE
Michaël Lachance, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi
UNE FICTION BIOPLIQTIQUE : LE CORP LARVAIRE
15 h 30 - 15 h 45 Pause
Inga Svala Thorsdottir, Artist
FROM THOR’S DAUGHTER PULVERIZATION SERVICE TO THE CITY OF BORG
Critical art ensemble (Steve Kurtz) Artist; State University of New York
USELESS WETWARE AND DEMENTED STRATEGIES
Mot de clôture • Closing Statements:
Ernestine Daubner & Louise Poissant
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Concept:
Biotechnologies announce the emergence of major breakthroughs and fresh
insights into various fields of knowledge in the near future: new
medical treatments, improvements in agriculture, the mapping of the
genomes of various species, the customized reconfiguration of bodies.
Such potent promises are both fascinating and disquieting, raising many
uncertainties and posing questions difficult to resolve.
For already 15 years now, artists have illustrated their interest in
this domain. Readopting thy Pygmalion myth, certain artists seek to
reinvent life, to create new hybrid life forms or to animate matter by
creating intelligent automata. Other artists raise important questions
as to the manipulation, reification, instrumentalisation and
commodification of life. Situated at the intersection of science,
technology, and artificial systems, this emerging art form necessitates
serious consideration. In this colloquium, artists and theorists will
explore various issues by presenting their research and art practices.
The presenters will address four broad themes:
Intersections of Biology, Aesthetics and Ethics
Biotech artworks are produced within a contemporary art context,
employing materials and techniques that cross over into the realm of new
media art. Also based on genetic engineering and other biotechnologies,
many art practices are direct interventions into living matter and can
be interpreted as material manifestations of postmodern notions of
hybridity. These emerging art practices produce new aesthetics that deal
with important theoretical, cultural and ethical issues, considered by
the presenters: What is the nature of the art experiment and its
theoretical framework? How does such art practice relate to science?
What changing contexts motivate these art practices? What are the
problematics underlying such artworks? What is the significance of art
practices that seek to reinvent life or to animate matter by creating
artificial intelligence?
Artificial Life
Artists working in the field of artificial life follow through on an
age-old dream found in the ancient practices of Egyptian priests who
sought to amaze crowds with statues that spoke and moved. Since then, we
have witnessed numbers of attempts to simulate life: the golem,
automata, robots and a whole spectrum of increasingly intelligent
electronic gadgets. Contemporary artificial life artworks continue to
astonish and prompt one to reflect upon the nature of artifice and life,
on intelligence, communication, and on the evolution and the uniqueness
of the human species. While many artworks strive for a certain physical,
physiological or psychological resemblance to human life, others explore
innovative adaptational behaviors, oftentimes casting insights into the
nature of human conduct. Artists and theorists will present their
artworks, research and reflections on an array of artificial life works.
Genetic Art / Hybrids
The number of genetic artworks produced in the last few years has
significantly increased, revealing a changing relationship with nature.
Employing diverse living organisms (bacteria, animals, plants, human
cells and tissue), artists invent new kinds of life forms. Sometimes
these are grounded in a search for a new aesthetics, as in the creation
of beautiful hybrid flowers or plants, or in the manipulation of
phenotypes of certain animals; others address ecological, ethical and
political concerns. The most controversial manifestations of this new
realm of art are those based on bioengineering techniques, as they often
trigger critical reaction, even indignation on the part of the
spectator. For example, transgenic art employs genetic engineering
techniques to create synthetic genes or to transfer natural genetic
material from one species into another, in order to create unique living
beings. Tissue art, based on cloning and tissue-engineering techniques,
produce semi-living entities by means of cell or skin cultures. Such art
practices create new hybrid life forms, often fusing the organic with
the non-organic. Certain hybrids are intermediaries between biological
interventions as such and research into artificial intelligence. They
are, at times, organisms implanted with nanotechnologies whose behaviors
are influenced by a particular program. Such practices also enter into
the realm of architecture whereby smart materials, made of organic
tissue cultures, are employed to render architecture both receptive and
interactive. Artists and theorists working in these emerging fields will
present their artworks and ideas.
Representational and Critical Strategies
Through imagery (photographs, films, Internet and other traditional
media), performances, interactive and multi-media installations, as well
as the employment of living matter, artists deal with the aesthetic,
cultural and ethical implications of scientific interventions into life.
New conceptions and perceptions of the body and of nature emerge. Some
artists create images of chromosomes, the DNA helix, genetic blueprints,
including genetic self-portraits; or they address issue relating to the
human genome and to heredity. Certain artists incorporate cultural codes
into their creation of synthetic genes. By so doing, they cast fresh
insights onto the relation between biology, culture and signifying
processes. Others ground their work on the interconnections between
biotechnological research and socio-cultural attitudes, particularly on
the debates regarding the instrumentalisation and commodification of
life by corporate powers. Many such artists bring to the fore the
serious problems relating to eugenics, reproductive technologies, gene
patenting, and issues of biowarfare. The artworks of such artists serve
to deconstruct and to demystify readymade ideas on biotechnological
practices.
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Co-organisateurs :
Dalia Chauveau, UQAM, étudiante au doctorat et artiste. Co-responsable
de la section : Vie artificielle et co-responsable de la préparation du
DVD.Jason Martin , UQAM, étudiant au doctorat. Concepteur du DVD.
co-responsable de la préparation du DVD.
Christine Palmieri, UQAM, stagiaire post-doctorale et artiste.
Responsable de la section : Hybrides. Co-responsable de la préparation
du DVD.
Nicolas Reeves, UQAM, professeur. Co-responsable de la section : Vie
artificielle.