※This video archive is open to the public for a limited time
Date: Saturday, January 22, 2022
Time: 17:00-18:30 (JST)
Venue: Online (Zoom)
Lecturer:James Bridle
Moderator: Yuko Hasegawa (Professor, Tokyo University of the Arts; Director, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa)
Registration: [ Ссылка ]
(Free of charge, Reservations required, Simultaneous Japanese/English interpretation available)
Abstract of Lecture:
Contemporary modes of thinking are defined by contemporary modes of computation: the way we see and understand the world is shaped and coloured by the technologies we use every day. The result is a broadening of our vision, and an exponential increase in the amount of information available to us, but also a concentration of power in fewer hands, and a narrowing of the methods we have to understand the world. In this lecture, James Bridle explores artificial and non-human intelligence, technological ecology, more-than-human relationships, and ways we might re-integrate ourselves with the World.
JAMES BRIDLE
James Bridle is a writer and artist working across technologies and disciplines. Their artworks have been commissioned by galleries and institutions and exhibited worldwide and on the internet. Their writing on literature, culture and networks has appeared in magazines and newspapers including Wired, the Atlantic, the New Statesman, the Guardian, and the Observer. They are the author of ‘New Dark Age’ (2018) and ‘Ways of Being’ (2022), and they wrote and presented “New Ways of Seeing” for BBC Radio 4 in 2019. Their work can be found at [ Ссылка ].
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