December 11–12, 2015
311 East Broadway
New York, NY 10002
USA
Superconversations: Machines that Matter brings together a range of thinkers and artists concerned with the intersection of technology and immanence, questioning the logic of vitalism while developing that of mechanism. The symposium builds upon several themes from e-flux’s Supercommunity / Superconversations project for the 56th Venice Biennale and forms the final installment of The New Centre’s Symposia 2015, a planetary series of in-person and simulcast video conversations that began in Graz and Melbourne in July and August.
The New Art panel concerns the status of art in the era of computation. If aesthetics has historically been defined in terms of the binary of techne and poiesis, what might a machinic art that takes the third step of deploying poises through techne look like? The implications of such a rethinking will address the extension and revision of the human via modes of virtuality as a form of collective imagination. The panel seeks a synthesis of prior theories of the relationship between art and technology, paving the way for new interventions.
The Science Fiction panel concerns the question of transgalactic emancipation as presented in the form and content of science fiction film, literature, and music. It examines collectivity in the era of interplanetary computation, departing from prior pieties of terrestriality and embodiment, with broad implications for the inhuman whole. Rather than beginning from the ubiquity of life, the panel focuses on science fiction that begins from the ubiquity of machines, heralding new possibilities for collective transformation that are irreducible to the social yet inseparable from the political.
The Computation panel concerns pan-computationalism, according to which, “if the laws of the universe can be reduced to binary code, there might be no actual difference between the universe and the computer,” and critical computationalism, in which intelligent machines are descendants of the long trajectory of inhuman prostheses which revise and extend the human beyond its biophenomenological substrate. Examining the emergence of artificial intelligence, the panel engages the process through which multiple, overlapping measurements result in ever more robust virtualizations.
Friday, December 11, 6–9pm
6pm: New Art panel
Maria Lind (via Google Hangout), Olivia Leiter, Aaron Gemmill, Gregory Sholette, and Ana Teixeira Pinto (via Google Hangout), moderated by Mohammad Salemy
8:30pm: Film screening
A Museum of Immortality, a collaboration between Anton Vidokle and Oleksiy Radynski
Saturday, December 12, 3–7pm
3pm: Science Fiction panel
Renata Morais (via Skype), Ben Woodard, Ed Keller, McKenzie Wark, and Mark Dery, moderated by Jason Adams
5pm: Film screening
Julieta Aranda, Stealing one’s own corpse (An alternative set of footholds for an ascent into the dark), 2014
5:30pm: Computation panel
Antonia Majaca (via Skype), Ekaterina Zavyalova, T’ai Smith (via Skype), Troy Conrad Therrien, and Reza Negarestani, moderated by Tony Yanick
Follow Karen Archey’s live coverage of the event on e-flux conversations.
For more information, contact program [at] e-flux.com.