Critical Cartography of Art & Visuality in the Global Age. Geoaesthetics, Politics and Labour

Critical Cartography of Art & Visuality in the Global Age. Geoaesthetics, Politics and Labour

Second International Conference

October 29-30, 2015, Barcelona, Catalonia

Organizing Team

Organized by: AGI | Art, Globalization, Interculturality
Department of Art History, Universitat de Barcelona
Director: Anna Maria Guasch Ferrer
Coordinator: Rafael Pinilla
Technical Assistance: Christian Alonso, Diana Padrón, Olga Sureda

Program

DAY 1. OCTOBER 29

REGISTRATION
9:00 am

INTRODUCTION
Welcome & Introduction
Anna Maria Guasch, Universitat de Barcelona
Rafael Pinilla, Universitat de Barcelona
9:30 am

PANEL 1:
Geoaesthetics of the Present: Towards a New Spatial Turn?

Keynote: Joaquin Barriendos, Columbia University
Convenor: Martí Peran, Universitat de Barcelona
10:00 am

BREAK
11:15 am

Visual Cartographies: The Territory of Art, the Art of Territories
Michaela Quadraro, University of Naples
Geoaesthetics in the Drifting City. Situational Practices and Sociopolitical Strategies in Korean Urban Art Projects
Birgit Mersmann, Jacobs University
Pensar en laberinto: comportamientos cartográficos en tiempos del capitalismo deslocalizado
Diana Padrón, Universitat de Barcelona
Geoeconomía y nueva en(es)clavitud en el arte contemporáneo centroamericano
Sergio Villena, Universidad de Costa Rica
El desastre no reconoce territorios
Paloma Villalobos, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
11:30 am

DISCUSSION
13:15 pm

LUNCH
14:00 pm

PANEL 2:
The Emergence of Artistic Multitude

Keynote: Pascal Gielen, Groningen University
Convenor: Juan Vicente Aliaga, Universitat Politècnica de València
16:00 pm

BREAK
17:15 pm

Using Art´s Tools for Social Change: A Brief Genealogy of Activist Creativity in the West
Julia Ramírez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Replantear el valor político del arte: el Materialismo Especulativo y el #Acceleracionismo como respuesta a la estetización de la vida cotidiana
Federica Matelli, Universitat de Barcelona
Fan Shot Multi-cam: Domesticación tecnológica y prácticas de creación audiovisual colectiva una propuesta para indagar en los estudios de la cultura visual
Esau Salvador, UNAM
Rhythmanalisations: The Making of the Political Vocabulary for Aesthetic Processes
Christina Thorstenberg, Goldsmiths College
17:30 pm

DISCUSSION
19:00 pm

DAY 2. OCTOBER 30

PANEL 3:
Labour and Social Reproduction: Women in Advanced Economies

Keynote: Angela Dimitrakaki, Edinburgh University
Convenor: Rafael Pinilla, Universitat de Barcelona
10:00 am

BREAK
11:15 am

La estética y la ética del cuidado; ¿Quién se hace cargo de los bebés, los enfermos y los ancianos?
Laia Manonelles, Universitat de Barcelona
Nosotr@s hablamos. Un proyecto de creación audiovisual como herramienta educativa frente a la desigualdad entre los sexos
Mau Monleón, Universitat Politècnica de València
Of Partial Citizenship, Precarity, and Potential: The Subject as Observer in the Work of Xyza Cruz Bacani
Alice Sarmiento, University of the Philippines
Participatory Art in the Information Age: Utopia, Explotation and Protest
Christina Grammatikopoulou, Universitat de Barcelona

DISCUSSION
13:15 pm

CLOSING REMARKS
14:00 pm

Any diagnosis about globalization is associated with a set of subjects, practices and institutions whose activity -or whose agreements and alliances- shape our World-System one way or another. Issues such as the “Ideological Apparatuses” that determine global politics and economy, the positioning of regions and locations in centers or peripheries, or the transformations of the productive sphere are realities that define the development of a social totality increasingly dependent of processes of transnational scope. In fact, one could say that the “displacement” of these processes -that are intertwined both with geopolitics and the economy- would come to express the inherent complexity of “contemporary being”.

Based on these premises, the Second International Conference Critical Cartography of Art and Visuality in the Global Age intends to map a scenario where politics, geography and economics have gained a decisive role in contemporary art practices. Thus, the key policies that articulate our cultural present are set in context; this suggests not losing sight of the “artistic impact” of conflicts that have come to revive the potential of the common action. Alongside this, the geoaesthetic dimension will be reclaimed to interpret those practices that are likely to redefine -or at least to question- the relations between center and periphery. Finally, both politics and geoaesthetics may serve to consider critically the phenomenon of work reorganization; especially the policies that “locate” the gender in a specific coordinates.

Thus we have politics, geoaesthetics and labour; three ways to interpret artistic practices and everything that competes with them -in order to establish a dialogue with questions deriving from disciplines such as Visual Studies, postcolonial criticism or political ecology -without discarding gender issues and New Materialism. Only from this deliberately interdisciplinary engagement will it be possible to renew the critical art potential and the discourses proposed through artistic praxis. This way, the Second International Conference Critical Cartography of Art and Visuality in the Global Age wants to continue investing in a methodology that serves to interpret a world whose principles -or paradigms- outline a new horizon: albeit, ultimately, a horizon that poses more questions than answers.

Panel 1.
The Emergence of the
Artistic Multitude

Keynote: Pascal Gielen, Groningen University
Coordinator: Juan Vicente Aliaga, Universitat Politècnica de València

For some time now, numerous artistic practices have realized the political potential of a presumed “new” social subject: the multitude. This category begins with the observation of the crisis of power structures linked to modernity and the advent of a hypothetical “polycentric” world order -a scenario that would have favoured the emergence of a social multiplicity capable of acting as a common agent of biopolitical production. This panel seeks to address the implications of a diagnosis inseparable from the idea of crisis; both regarding its possibilities and its contradictions and problems. Based on these premises, issues such as the political dimension of an art intrinsically linked to crisis could come into consideration; the development of action forms related to artistic praxis; or the “institutionalization” of the recent protests by the “art world”.

Panel 2.
Geoaesthetics of the Present:
Towards A New “Spatial Turn”?

Keynote: Joaquin Barriendos, Columbia University, New York
Convener: Martí Peran, Universitat de Barcelona

The realization that space is crucial to consider our contemporaneity is manifested in the multiple diagnoses that have registered a “spatial turn”. It seems symptomatic that artistic practice and discourse incorporate this interest from one perspective or another, even moving towards the production of categories likely to raise new epistemological paradigms. This is the case with “geoaesthetics”, a “discipline” that, among other things, is based on the critical consideration of spatial reality -in a “material” sense of the term- as a topos where artistic discourse is received and emitted. Taking these premises into account, this panel proposes a hypothetical “geoaesthetic condition” to address its cultural and political implications, its relation to practices and lifestyles that are being spread -or settled- across an increasingly complex territoriality, as well as their connection to approaches related to postcolonial criticism or ecology.

Panel 3.
Labour And Social Reproduction: Gender In “Advanced” Economies

Keynote: Angela Dimitrakaki, Edinburgh College of Art
Convener: Carles Guerra, Universitat Pompeu i Fabra, Barcelona

Work reorganization in “advanced” economies has led to the incorporation of women into the sphere of paid employment; however, the “old” gendered division of labour still conditions their social role one way or another. The specialization in domestic “care”, wage discrimination and sexual exploitation -in its multiple variants- are simple examples that reveal inequalities constantly challenged by feminist criticism. This panel intends to discuss and question the “cultural” role of women from the perspective of work reorganization; in this course, issues such as potential “mutations” in the field of social reproduction, the proliferation of “circuits” of exploitation and discrimination in the workplace, or the margin of commitment that can be given within artistic practices will be brought up into discussion.

Videos

Welcome and introduction: Critical Cartography of Art & Visuality in the Global Age
Welcome and presentation of the 2nd international conference on critical cartography and visual art in the age of global by Anna Maria Guasch and Rafael Pinilla at the University of Barcelona (UB) On October 29, 2015 in the Aula Magna of the Faculty of Geography and History UB.

Conference: Geoaesthetics of the Present: Towards a New “Spatial Turn”?
Speaker:Joaquin Barriendos
Joaquin Barriendos lecture at Columbia University moderated by Marti Peran, University of Barcelona (UB) within the 2nd International Conference on Critical Cartography of Art & Visuality in the Global Age on October 29, 2015 in the Aula Magna the Faculty of Geography and History UB.

Conference: The Emergence of the Artistic Multitude
Speaker: Pascal Gielen, Groningen University
Keynote convened by Juan Vicente Aliaga from the Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV) within the 2nd international conference on critical cartography of art and visuality in the global age on October 29th, 2015 at the Aula Magna of the Faculty of Geography and History University of Barcelona.

Venues

UB, Universitat de Barcelona / Aula Magna
Montalegre 6, 4th Floor, 08001 Barcelona, Catalonia
www.ub.edu

MACBA, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona / Auditorium
Plaça dels Angels 1, 08001 Barcelona, Catalonia
www.macba.cat