Search Results for "hangar"

Sonic fictions. Workshop by Helen Torres

How does power operate through sound violence? How did colonial practices use sound as a tool of domination and control, from the barking of dogs to the mutilation of auditory organs? How do police and military forces use sound as an instrument of torture and repression?

What violences are generated when language is lost, erased, forbidden? What do the different speech practices and the ways in which voices distort silence imply? What would a space-time not traversed by such violence be like? What sounds would a hypothetical anti-colonial sound archive include?

Based on these questions and others that arise, during two sessions we will review a story by Octavia Butler, a sound and visual collage by Elysia Crampton and a short film by Lucrecia Martel, in the workshop Sonic Fictions. Conversations on Sound as a Tool for Struggle and Resistance, we will speculate on voice, speech, music and sound as tools of decolonial struggle and resistance, amplifying listening as a matrix of fictions to enter into their transformative codes. In a third session, we will record a podcast with the experience of the workshop.

The intention is to talk about the power of sound fictions that operate in dissent, that alter the modes of sensitive representation and hegemonic forms of enunciation by changing frames, scales, rhythms, building new appearances between the real and the speculative, the singular and the common, the human and the non-human, the (in)visible, (in)decible, the (in)audible, the (i)recognizable and its significance.

Dates: June 10 and 17, 2021
Time: 6 pm- 8 pm
Participants: max. 25 people
Registration: here
Registration fee: 3€. Includes free admission to the CCCB’s Ciencia Fricción exhibition. Payment can be made at the entrance of the workshop at Hangar.

Previous materials 

First session. Speech Fabulation

  • the story Speech Sounds by African-American writer Octavia Butler, a dystopia in which a virus causes people to lose the ability of language, both spoken and written, and the world is transformed into a chaos of violence and destruction. More info
  • short film “Nueva Argirópolis”, by Argentine filmmaker Lucrecia Martel, in which a soundtrack without subtitles composed of rumours, almost inaudible conversations, gestures and speech codes incomprehensible to the border police presents a soundscape in which a group of indigenous activists plot resistance. More info

Second session. Cuir sonic fictions

  • mini-opera Dissolution of the Sovereign: A Time Slide Into the Future (Or: A Non-Abled Offender’s Exercise in Jurisprudence) (2016) by trans artist Aymara Elysia Crampton, a sound and visual collage that fabulates the resurrection in the distant future of Bartolina Sisa, an Aymara revolutionary who in the 13th century fought against the Spanish conquerors and was brutally murdered, and her merger with non-white trans cyborgs sheltered in a subway labyrinth of abandoned American prisons. More info

Helen Torres is a sociologist, educator and translator. She works from feminist and anti-colonial perspectives on the articulation between language, art and politics. She has published a novel (Autopsia de una langosta, Melusina, 2010) and an anthology of short stories (Relatos Marranos, Pol·len, 2015). She has specialized in the work of Donna Haraway, by whom she has translated into Spanish Testigo_Modesto@Segundo_Milenio: HombreHembra_Conoce_Oncoratón (UOC, 2002), el Manifiesto Chthuluceno desde Santa Cruz and Seguir con el problema (consonni, 2019). She conducts workshops on speculative fabulation. She has translated Marge Piercy’s Mujer al borde del tiempo (consonni, 2020). She has developed geolocated sound narratives and literary walks. Her latest sound intervention, Exercici de fabulació especulativa, is part of the exhibition Polítiques del sòl, curated by Christian Alonso.

http://helenatorres.wordpress.com/

This workshop is part of the program Ficciones del des-orden, and is organized in collaboration with Biofriction (European project led by Hangar) and the exhibition Ciencia Fricción at the CCCB.

To hear the collective podcast between the participants and Helen the link available at Archive.org.

Arc-hive.zone project launch

Diana Mordido Aires (2020) Ares de Casa. Credits: Diana Aires (April 2021) Marvão Academy

We are glad to announce the launching of the Arc-hive.zone project. 

Arc-hive.zone project is formed by part of the Biofriction European project consortium led by Hangar, Zavod Kersnikova, Bioart Society, Cultivamos Cultura, together with the NGO Kontejner and the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences.

Arc-hive aims to create an open-source digital platform that aggregates, preserves, publishes, distributes, and contextualizes various information, knowledge, and documentation on art, focusing on biomedia. This ensures open access to multiple users and a comprehensive outreach of digital materials across cultural sectors and territories.
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Arc-hive addresses the challenges of creating and distributing cohesive digitization and dissemination protocols through a centralized digital space. Here,  knowledge and best practices are collected and are related to art, predominantly using biological materials.

The project is created thanks to the collaboration of six partners, working within NGOs, the museum sector, publishing, and IT and audio-visual field.
The platform is the main project result, it has several functions such as being a catalyzation tool for the activities of artwork and museum specimen digitization, archiving and distribution; remote event participation, planning and realization; augmented publishing; staff and student education and training; and topic contextualization and interconnection.
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Arc.hive wants to build capacities of various cultural agents which work with biological and living materials. Also, the project provides a feasible and tailor-made digital solution to some issues fundamental to the field, following philosophical principles of open data and information sharing in all project phases.
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Through the website https://arc-hive.zone/, @arc.hive.zone on Instagram and arc.hive.platform on Facebook, they will be keeping you up to date with the news and activities of the project.

Transhackfeminist Days

On the 12th and 13th of June Hangar hosts two days dedicated to Transhackfeminism.

To generate knowledge, practices and experiences from a transhackfeminist perspective, how do we understand transhackfeminism? If what matters are the ways of doing, and transhackfeminism is understood as “hacking with care” – how do these practices take care? How to conceive a transversal transhackfeminism? How to establish inter-species links without reproducing colonialist logics? How to connect humans and non-humans? How do contamination and the transmission of knowledge operate in this ecosystem?

With the idea not to answer but to put these questions in dialogue, these two transhackfeminist days aim to activate a series of artefacts and actions. These two days invite participants to think together and activate reflections around Transhackfeminism (THF) through the reading of texts, conversations and the collective elaboration of the second fanzine of the wetlab.

The workshops are proposed by the wetlab’s resident collective, Ce Quimera and Gaia Leandra in collaboration with Txe. Workshops carried out within the framework of the Biofriction project.

https://wetlab.hangar.org/

Practical details: 

When: 12th and 13th June
Where: Wetlab and Plató Hangar
Timetable: Saturday 12th from 11am to 5pm and Sunday 13th from 4pm to 8pm. (it’s possible to attend both sessions!)
Capacity: 20 people – Free registration here

Download of the first fanzine wetlab

Biofriction Radio: BLOT

Biofriction Radio collects podcasts interviewing Biofriction artists in residence exploring evolutionary biology, artistic practices, and thoughts from experimental research with biotech.
In the fourth episode of the podcast, Simona Deaconescu and Vanessa Goodman, Biofriction artists in residence at Cultivamos Cultura, discuss their project BLOT (an acronym for Body Line of Thought).
The work shows a series of performance situations. It explores the idea of contamination seen as collaboration and a way of communication, focusing on humans’ movements and the relation with their bacterias. 
BLOT is an interdisciplinary project in line with recent investigations about the constant human interaction with the environment and the microorganisms with which humans coexist. Starting with this concept, BLOT focuses on the layers of bacteria on a person’s skin as a unique fingerprint, a medium through which the act of contamination happens.
The project uses the body to analyze how human existence is translated by language through processes of dependence and control, focusing on the fine line between what is useful and what is toxic.
The resulting installations of the project aim to rethink the body as an interconnected system, solid and fragile at the same time.
The radio is part of the European project Biofriction led by Hangar in partnership with Zavod Kersnikova, Bioart Society and Cultivamos Cultura.
Link available at Archive.org 

SummerLab 2021_Elements of Care

Thanks to the Creative European project Biofriction, Hangar and Cultivamos Cultura started a new partnership. As part of the project, Cultivamos Cultura and Hangar, in July 2021 organized the 4th of SummerLab 2021, entitled Elements of Care.
Nowadays, the intersection of Art, Biology and Environment offer a great opportunity to visual artists.  For this reason, the main focus of the Summer School is to investigate the interdisciplinary relationship between art, life and environmental sciences through hands-on exercises, combining theory and practice in an informal environment. Also, the Summer School explores addressed several important issues such as the cultural representations of technology and science, ethical concerns and the evolution of bioart as a cultural phenomenon.
The Lab’s primary goal is to allow the audience to acquire theoretical and practical skills in biological and environmental sciences in connection to the visual arts. In addition, the Summer Lab aims to facilitate dialogue between different areas of knowledge/practice and social contexts, diluting the distance that often occurs between artists, curators, scientists, researchers and social agents. 
During the week, the Summer School hosts several kinds of activities, such as seminars, debates, visits, and the creation of artworks with biological media. Through these theoretical and practical tools, the Lab investigates the interdisciplinary relationship between art, life, and environmental sciences.
Moreover, the course will explore the writing of Donna Haraway, Karen Barad, Heather Davis a.o., as well as the art of Mary Magic, Špela Petrič, Saša Spačal and others, propose new artistic approaches related to these issues. (Regine Rapp and Christian de Lutz)
Finally, the course leaves plenty of room for informal activities and a cultural and social program. 
All the activities of the SummerLab received support from Europa Creativa and are part of the Biofriction European project
Faculty:
Marta de Menezes, artist, curator, art director of Cultivamos Cultura
Luis Graca, MD, PhD, Head of Cellular Immunology Unit and Professor at the University of Lisbon Medical School.
Regine Rapp; Art Laboratory Berlin.
Christian de Lutz; Art Laboratory Berlin.
Ana Baleia, São Luis, Odemira, PT
Maya Kempe, São Luis, Odemira, PT
Crystal Kershaw, São Luis, Odemira, PT

Biofriction Radio: Kinlab

Biofriction Radio is a collection of podcasts interviewing Biofriction artists in residence exploring evolutionary biology, artistic practices, and thoughts from experimental research with biotech.

In the podcast, Maddalena Fragnito and Zoe Romano, Biofriction artists in residence at Hangar, talk about the development of their project OBOT,(an acronym for Our Bodies, Our Tech). Through their research, the artists aim to implement a citizen science approach into the investigation of the women’s body around three conditions of life: teenagehood, fertility, and menopause. The project wants to identify a toolbox of processes and practices to design a replicable blueprint for a neighbourhood-based wet-lab by gathering collective intelligence through DIT analysis.

Up until now, most of the biohacking labs have been focused on experimentation by attracting mostly middle class highly educated men. With OBOT the artists are challenging the complexity of the topic and lower the barriers for a more diverse crowd.  OBOT aims to explore new open-source approaches with practices of collaboration, co-creation, and citizen science, by fostering an inclusive environment around womxn’s care, starting from a neighborhood level.

The radio is part of the European project Biofriction led by Hangar in partnership with Zavod KersnikovaBioart Society and Cultivamos Cultura.

Link available at Archive.org