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[Commlist] Conference: Artificial Atmospheres and Unexpected Media: Exploring Media Art and Machine Learning
Sun Oct 13 12:59:22 GMT 2024
Conference: Artificial Atmospheres and Unexpected Media: Exploring Media
Art and Machine Learning
16–17 October 2024
NOVA University Lisbon
and Online
Free
For more information, full programme, and link for online:
https://ifilnova.pt/en/events/artificial-atmospheres-and-unexpected-media/
<https://ifilnova.pt/en/events/artificial-atmospheres-and-unexpected-media/>
About the Artificial Atmospheres and Unexpected Media: Exploring Media
Art and Machine Learning conference:
Technology shapes our sensory experiences and extends our cognitive and
bodily capabilities. Its pervasive influence coupled with the
ever-expanding reach of artificial intelligence across diverse facets of
society underscores the urgent need for comprehensive exploration,
experimentation, and discussion. Machine learning advancements, while
offering unprecedented tools and opportunities, also raises profound
ethical dilemmas, blurring the boundaries between reality and
artificiality. It is urgent that this technology be explored and
experimented with and discussed from various angles.
This conference seeks to explore the intricate relationship between
artistic expression and emerging media technologies, particularly
focusing on machine learning and virtual environments. By scrutinizing
this alliance, our aim is to unpack the myriad challenges and novel
responses it presents to contemporary issues spanning ethical, social,
political, and economic domains. The rapid evolution of Artificial
Intelligence elicits a spectrum of reactions, ranging from utopian
optimism to dystopian apprehension. Generative AI programs can be a
useful tool for the artist, and simultaneously a threat to creative
careers. Algorithmic technologies have the potential for AI models to
generate creative content, or for creative users to generate
“collaborations” with machines, such as transhumanist art, reflecting
the ideas of Marshall McLuhan that technology is extending human bodies,
reflecting a proactive vision of the future while attempting to address
both the positive and negative impacts on society. We aim to delve into
the creative intersections of media art, immersive technologies and
virtual environments, and machine learning through the creative lens of
the artist.
What virtues might survive or thrive in our art worlds through these
changes?
What virtues may be retained and strengthened through artistic
interventions and explorations of these changes?
Keynote Speaker
DANIEL CHÁVEZ HERAS is a lecturer in Digital Culture and Creative
Computing in the Department of Digital Humanities at King’s College
London. He specialises in the computational production and analysis of
visual culture. His research combines critical frameworks in the history
and theories of cinema, television, and photography, with advanced
technical practice in creative and scientific computing, including
applied machine learning technologies. Daniel has worked extensively in
interdisciplinary design and creative industries, in Mexico and in the
UK, with cultural institutions such as the British Council and the BBC.
He is an affiliate of King’s Institute for Artificial Intelligence, part
of the Computational Humanities Group, and a member of the Creative AI
Lab, in partnership with the Serpentine Galleries in London. His newest
book is Cinema and Machine Vision, Artificial Intelligence, Aesthetics
and Spectatorship, from Edinburgh University Press.
Invited Speakers/Artists
PABLO NÚÑEZ PALMA is an experimental filmmaker and independent
researcher whose work investigates the intersection of new technologies
with audiovisual archives. His latest projects seek to harness
generative AI to support creative processes and explore ethical forms of
human-machine co-authorship.
JAN BOT is a filmmaking bot that combines archival footage and
algorithms to generate experimental videos based on two ingredients:
found footage and today’s trending topics. Jan Bot was an artificial
intelligence programme created by artists Bram Loogman and Pablo Núñez
Palma in collaboration with Eye Filmmuseum and support from the
Netherlands Creative Industries Fund. Using some of the latest A.I. of
its time, Jan Bot worked day and night producing poetic films inspired
by current news and images from early cinema.
REBECCA BARON is a Los Angeles-based media artist known for her lyrical
essay films which explore the construction of history, with a particular
interest in still photography and its relationship to the moving image.
Her work has screened widely at international film festivals and media
venues including documenta 12, International Film Festival Rotterdam,
New York Film Festival, Anthology Film Archive, Toronto Film Festival,
London Film Festival, Pacific Film Archive, Flaherty Film Seminar,
Viennale and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Her films have received
awards at the San Francisco, Black Maria, Montreal, Leipzig, Athens,
Onion City, KIN, Sinking Creek and Ann Arbor Film Festivals. She is the
recipient of a 2002 Guggenheim Fellowship and a 2007 Fellowship at the
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She has taught documentary and
experimental film at Massachusetts College of Art, Harvard University,
and since 2000 at California Institute of the Arts. Early adopter. Web
pioneer. Connoisseur of emerging technologies. Appreciator of systems.
Collector of analog devices. Teacher of technology, high and low.
DOUGLAS GOODWIN is a technologist investigating the mechanisms by which
language and other technologies mediate our perception of reality.
Goodwin’s work has shown at many venues including the Toronto
International Film Festival, Harvard Film Archive, Ambulante, London
Film Festival, Pacific Film Archive, Frankfurt Film Museum, SIGGRAPH,
REDCAT, the Orphans Film Symposium, the Courtisane Festival, Eyebeam,
and the Ann Arbor Film Festival. “Lossless”, a collaboration with Rebeca
Baron, was the first digital work to enter the collection of the George
Eastman House in Rochester, NY. He currently serves as the first
Fletcher Jones Foundation Scholar in Computation and a Visiting
Assistant Professor of Media Studies at Scripps College.
BUDHADITYA CHATTOPADHYAY is an artist, media practitioner, researcher,
and writer. Incorporating diverse media, creative technologies and
research, Chattopadhyay produces works for large-scale installation and
live performance addressing contemporary issues of environment and
ecology, migration, race and decoloniality. Chattopadhyay has received
numerous residencies, fellowships, and international awards, e.g. PRIX
Ars Electronica 2011, Computer Space Festival 2014, Confluence 2021. His
works have been widely exhibited, performed or presented across the
globe, and released by Gruenrekorder (DE) and Touch (UK). Chattopadhyay
has an expansive body of scholarly publications in the areas of media
art history, theory and aesthetics, cinema and sound studies in leading
peer-reviewed journals. He is the author of four books including The
Nomadic Listener (2020), The Auditory Setting (2021), and Between the
Headphones (2021). Chattopadhyay holds a PhD in Artistic Research and
Sound Studies from Academy of Creative and Performing Arts, Leiden
University, and an MA in New Media from the Faculty of Arts, Aarhus
University.
JOEL KRUEGER* is an Associate Professor in Philosophy at the University
of Exeter. He works in phenomenology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy
of cognitive science: specifically, issues in 4E (embodied, embedded,
enacted, extended) cognition, including emotions, social cognition,
loneliness, and psychopathology. He also writes about comparative
philosophy and philosophy of music. He is an Associate Editor of
Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences and Passion: Journal of the
European Philosophical Society for the Study of Emotions (EPSSE).
*by special invitation and support from the exploratory research project
GENAI.
Location
Colégio Almada Negreiros (Campus Campolide)
NOVA FCSH (Campus Berna)
Zoom
Conference organisers: Patrícia Castello Branco (CineLab — IFILNOVA);
Maile Colbert (CineLab — IFILNOVA).
About IFILNOVA/CineLab’s working group in Art and Technology:
The Art and Technology working group focuses on exploring the
relationships between artistic practices and the development of new
technologies. Its main aim is to critically analyze, assess and discuss
the ways the alliance between art and technology poses new challenges
and offers new ways to respond to contemporary issues related to social,
political, and economic paradigms, such as social justice, ecological
sustainability, and economic development.
Event supported by the Foundation for Science and Technology (Fundação
para a Ciência e para a Tecnologia) of the Portuguese Ministry of
Education and Science under the projects UIDB/00183/2020 and
UIDP/00183/2020, and by NOVA FCSH within the scope of the ArgLab
exploratory research project “(GENAI) Ensuring Human Cognitive
Flourishing against the background of GENerative AI: sustaining deep
minds within our new cognitive ecology”.
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