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While legal and cultural scholars have labeled the third part of the 20th century–with its particular attention to testimony–as the "era of the witness," the emergence of forensics in legal forums and popular entertainment signifies a new attention to the communicative capacity, agency, and power of things. Today's legal and political decisions are often based upon the capacity to display and read DNA samples, 3D laser scans, nanotechnology, and the enhanced vision of electromagnetic microscopes and satellite surveillance. The aesthetic dimension of forensics includes its means of presentation, the theatrics of its delivery, the forms of image and gesture. The forensic aesthetics of the present carries with it grave political and ethical implications, spreading its impact across socioeconomic, environmental, scientific, and cultural domains. The lectures and roundtable discussions by the participating artists, scholars and curators investigate these issues in a series of forums organized around a number of disputed objects. Presented by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School and co-sponsored and co-organized with Cabinet Magazine, The Forensic Architecture ERC Project at The Centre for Research Architecture, Goldsmiths, University of London, and The Human Rights Project at Bard College, on occasion of the Vera List Center's 2011-2013 focus theme "Thingness." Friday, November 4, 2011, 6:00–8:00 p.m. "Grave diggers" have, since the middle of the 1980s, been unearthing bones and turning burial sites into an epistemic resource from which the details of war crimes can be reconstructed and brought into the pale of the law. The practice of forensic teams, including archaeologists, anthropologists, pathologists, radiologists, dental experts, bio-data technicians, DNA specialists and statisticians of all sorts, mark a shift in emphasis from the living to the dead, from memory and trauma to empirical science, and from subjects to objects in accounting for atrocities. Introduction: Presentations:
Organized as forum for people and things, the presentations are set in a theatrical arena arranged around a number of disputed objects. Introductions by Thomas Keenan and Eyal Weizman. Roundtable I: Forensic Architecture Buildings are both sensors and agents; they materialize political and economical forces, and also the events that befall them. Buildings undergo constant formal transformations in response to forces and some of these processes can be reconstructed through structural calculations, blast analyses, and the determination of the failure points of structures, details, and forms. Nikolaus Hirsch, Städelschule, Frankfurt a.M., Germany, moderator Lunch Break 1:00–2:00 p.m. Roundtable II: Constructed Evidence: The Thing Makes Its Forum What if the object is not a "witness" but an entity constructed for the express purpose of creating or activating the forum? Such an object might map the diffused networks of informal or illegal labor, or be called upon to narrate historical events in the absence of evidentiary materials. Susan Schuppli, Goldsmiths, University of London, moderator Roundtable III: Animism Whenever the passive/active nexus between object and subject, humans and the non-human is disturbed or even reversed–as in the coming-to-life of seemingly dead matter, the becoming autonomous of inert things–we inevitably step into the territory of animism: that non-modern worldview that conceives of things as animated and possessing agency. With regards to Forensic Aesthetics, the historical discourse of animism provides a foil for a reflection on the boundaries at stake. Anselm Franke, moderator Closing Remarks |
DNA of Creativity: Fusing the Energies of San Diego Arts and Sciences, the San Diego Visual Arts Network is gathering information and making connections between the art and science worlds with a goal of fusing the energies of both communities to produce a series of projects. These projects will enhance the viewing public’s perception of creativity and its role in our lives. This blog will endeavor to add links of interest and provide a way for free discussions on this subject.
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Thursday, November 3, 2011
Forensic Aesthetics
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Visual Science
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