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Machine Wilderness Symposium
Amsterdam, Artis, 20151102
(notes)
Machine Wilderness: new ecosystems where environment & technology co-exist, in which humans are less central
#machinewilderness
Theun Karelse
- ISEA 2012 (Andrea Polli) - Ron Horvath in the 1960 (cultural geographer) - wrote about machines in a negative way: machines are dumb, wilderness is a mess. this event - more positive approach
- design from an environment - machine not easy to distinguish from its environment, integrated
Augmented ecology augmented ecology.com @augmentedeco: 1. how to transform GPS tags on animals to make much richer meanings (Microsoft: Technology for nature - individuals and groups; facebook for herds, anchor point for drones - hybrid ecology)
- danger - cyberpoaching - panna-211 (panna tiger in a reserve in india), don’t share photos from safaris, poachers can track the animals
- gps tags → epizoic media (libraries of signatures)
- harvesting fields → harvesting data
- IOT → internet of organisms and ecosystems
2. Ecological Robotics
- Daan van Dijk Darpa 2013, COTSBot (management of invasive starfish), Robird (management - scares birds away from Schiphol), TumbleWeed bot (based on plant movement - drifts, blows through the desert and collects environmental data), SwarmFarming (using robots for agriculture)
- Biocarbon engineering 0 planting 1mil trees per year using robotic drones
- Rainforest connect - conservation using 2nd hand phones - they listen for the sound of chainsaws, and report - monitoring
- MyBionicBird
- Compostable Drones - how do we deal with lifespan of tech in landscapes
- AI: mind (thinking machines) + bodies (acting machines) + environment = behaviour
Designing
- starting from processes in the environment, beyond objects,
- starting from local habitats
- diverse knowledge systems
Designing towards cohabitation & intimacy
—> get slides from theun!
Erik de Jong
Prof at the UVA & Artis
“Natura Artis Magistra” (1838) - Nature is the teacher of art & science (Royal Zoological Society); → What does it mean for the future to connect art, science, nature…
- e.g. exhibition of microbes & micro-organisms
- Het Groote Museum first museum in NL (1852) - in the future, a museum, a workplace for the antropocene (started in 1600 - colonialism, 1900 - industrialisation…), for man and nature, platform for discussion & exchange; where do we stand as humans on the earth; galleries on nature, science and technology, biomimicry, the future (cyborgs, replacements of nature…); laboratory nature - nature managed by man (manipulating genetics, etc.)
- E. Wilson “the artificial new environment into which technology has catapulted humanity” - what does this mean? (e.g. natural disasters, infrastructure failures (New York blackout in the storm in 2012))
- wilderness = 1st nature, cultural landscape (agriculture) - 2nd nature, designed nature (gardens, urban environments) - 3rd nature
- Louis le Roy, Turn off nature / turn on nature (1973) - not dominating but co-operating with nature - still dualistic thinking - machine ↔ nature
- we need a new language to describe interactions between machines and environments
- the etymology of the word machine = “device”, “instruments”, “apparatus”, “machine a habiter”…
- “wilderness” = “community of life untrammeled by man where man himself is a visitor, not to remain” - this changes in the antropocene
- city as metabolism - a new relationship between town and landscape - hybrid landscapes - deserted industrial locations, landfill reclamation…
- avoid confusions with pre-modern and mechanistic views
- finding a way to talk about hybrids, co-operation between technology and nature - a common vitality in reclaiming aesthetics as a process and not an object in the tangle of tech and nature - including philosophy, ethics, morals - responsibility of human nature towards non human nature
Petran Kockelkoren
Technological Disclosure of Landscapes
How technologies opened up our experience of landscapes?
- Nature is thought to be a healing experience, while cities and technologies are thought of as being alienating - inherited from the romantic era (??)
- “Nature and memory”. The term “landscape” is originally dutch - the landcape painters of the Golden Age; usually without any technology (even thought the Dutch landcape was riddled with technology), “Nature as sublime” (19th ct.), “Technology is alienating” - loss of nature (Heidegger, etc.), 21st ct - the dualism begins to change - technology can re-connect humans to nature
- 19th ct - transport technology (train, etc.) - a revolution of how we experienced landscapes;
- “railway spine” - cultural pathology resulting from incorporation of technology - health claims related to train journeys; problem for insurance companies - learning to cope with the phenomenon of speed and technology which hasn’t been integrated into daily life; 19th ct - hysteria, 20th ct. alien abductions, multiple personality disorders - symptoms are real, causes uncertain
- fairground attraction - simulation of a train/boat experience, fair ground as exercise ground, immersive simulation, to learn to cope with the experience of speed - landscapes moving - things nearby flash by fast, further away things move slower - you have to change the way you perceive things around you - people are unsettled
- Victor Hugo - description of his train journeys “flowers are no longer flowers but colourful streaks…”
- Futurists - depicting speed and velocity, buildings start to dance, people flashing by, 'streaks - signs of speed'
- 20ct - car, monument to a car race - it alienated people from the central, static perspective, not so much from landscape
- Ballard - attempting to change perspective and coin new imaginaries for speed - we needed to re-normalise our senses - images and sounds help us cope with the new experiences…
- pop-art - streaks in comics - speeding cars
- zootrope - suggesting movement, children’s toys, artistic expression, scientific simulation of birds in flight (Max Ernst) - disclosing the world by means of technology changes our perception and sensory experience
- Muybridge - horses galloping - are they ever free from the ground (yes)
- Stereoscope - photograph with two different focus points - the world available in stereo - photographers began experimenting with focal points (depth, 'enhanced stereos' - issue with veracity); Bishop - if God wanted us to see this depth, he would have given us eyes further apart…; Scientific photo of the moon - very difficult (distance, etc.), but there is a wobble in the moon (the photos were taken 3 weeks apart) - “a step out of and beyond nature” - but it disclosed the possibility to view the moon much more intimately - a mediated view of nature, with a more intimate and immersive knowledge - a breakthrough in the view of technology
- Tintin - “destination Moon” - actual rockets and clothing inspired by Herge’ comic; project Tintin insterstellar nanosat mission to alpha centauri - Alan Bean (astronaut) - “the only artist who has been to the moon”, painting with moon-dust
- Andrea Polli (tracking data of hurricane Bob → “Atmospheric Weatherworks” acoustic artwork to understand nature on its own terms, complex rhythms and melodies of nature on human scale) & Gavin Starks (translated data from telescope images into sounds - soothing synth sounds - a deception; but the image itself is mediated already (radiowaves translated into image)) discussion at DEAF 2004 - we are always embedded in cultural and historical incorporations of technology - nature is always a mediated event
- Husserl “an experience of nature is always artificial” - documentaries - mediated, staged, interpreted events
- Esther Polak - GPS traces through the city “Amsterdam Real Time” (2002) - the mediated event - sky-drawing, “Milk”, fishing boats - different stories emerge than when we look at photographs - new positioning of artists in the field, just breaking ground
- 3D projections in cinemas, art galleries - contemporary fairgrounds to exercise new perceptions