Angels, Bots, Cute AIs and Animism: A Conversation on AI Imaginaries

July 10 2024 | 18:00 BST | Borough Road Gallery, London

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The Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics group in collaboration with the Centre for the Study of the Networked Image is inviting you to a discussion of cyberfeminism and AI imaginaries, including a talk by Bogna Konior and followed by a conversation with Amy Ireland, Gabriela Méndez Cota and Alexandra (Sasha) Anikina. The event will take place on Wednesday, 10th July at the Borough Road Gallery, London South Bank University (entrance on Borough Road).

18.00 Welcome by Sasha Anikina and Geoff Cox

18.10-19.00 Angels in Latent Spaces: Notes on AI Erotics, Bogna Konior

This lecture engages with female Christian erotic mysticism, from the Middle Ages until modernity, as an early philosophy of artificial intelligence. Through a selection of original mystical writings and contemporary cyberculture theory, it explores how female stigmatics and mystics could be considered as thinkers of the internet to come, including the subjects of human-machine romance as well as artificial reproduction. Drawing on my own canon of cyberfeminist and mystical texts, as well as experiments with image and text generators, I propose a prophetic reading of these early theologies. The writings of these mystics model for us, I argue, a way of thinking about artificial intelligence and the destiny of our species, where inhuman eroticism is a gateway into a machine age, already prefigured by the popularity of AI partner apps like Replika, virtual reality sex in VrChat, the popularity of avatar erotic models, or remote sex technologies.

19.00-20.00 Angels, Bots, Cute AIs and Animism: A Conversation on Imaginaries – with Bogna Konior, Amy Ireland, Gabriela Méndez Cota and Alexandra (Sasha) Anikina. The conversation will be followed by drinks at the gallery.

Bogna Konior is an Assistant Professor of IMA (Interactive Media Arts) at NYU Shanghai. She is also a Research Fellow in the Antikythera Program on Speculative Computation at the Berggruen Institute, and a mentor in the Synthetic Intelligence program at Medialab-Matadero Madrid. Her work on digital culture, philosophy of new media, and posthumanism has been presented internationally, recently including the Cambridge Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence, ZKM | Center for Art and Media, e-flux, and the Ljubljana Biennale. She is currently working on two projects concerned with long-term trajectories of technological development. Her current academic project is on Polish science fiction writer and philosopher, Stanislaw Lem, and his neglected contribution to the theory of biotechnological evolution of autonomous reason. She is also conducting a multimedia research project on female Catholic mysticism as an early form of cyberfeminism and a predictor of machine erotics, nonhuman personhood, and artificial reproduction. Together with Anna Greenspan and Benjamin Bratton, she is the editor of Machine Decision is not Final: China, and the History and Future of AI (Urbanomic, 2024).

Gabriela Méndez Cota is a researcher in the Department of Philosophy at Universidad Iberoamericana, Ciudad de México. Inspired by deconstruction, psychoanalysis and technoscience feminism, her work explores the subjective and ethical dimensions of technological/political controversies in specific contexts. Her books include Disrupting Maize: Food, Biotechnology and Nationalism in Contemporary Mexico (Rowman & Littlefield, 2016). Among other places, her work has appeared in New FormationsMedia Theory, Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, and the Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identities (2020). Since 2014, she has been co-editor of the open access journal of culture and theory, Culture Machine (culturemachine.net). Between 2019 and 2021 she led a practice-based educational initiative on critical/feminist/intersectional perspectives of open access, which included a collaboration with the COPIM project at the Centre for Postdigital Cultures at Coventry University, and which resulted in a collective rewriting of The Chernobyl Herbarium (Open Humanities Press, 2015).

Amy Ireland is a writer and theorist best known for her work with the technomaterialist transfeminist collective, Laboria Cuboniks, whose Xenofeminism: A Politics for Alienation (Verso, 2018) has been translated into eighteen languages. With Maya B. Kronic she is the author of Cute Accelerationism (Urbanomic, 2024), and an anthology of her philosophical essays (Filosofía-Ficción: Inteligencia Artificial, technología oculta y el fin de la humanidad), was published by Holobionte in 2022. Amy’s work has appeared in various academic journals, poetry anthologies, art reviews, and exhibitions, including the Barbican Centre’s 2019 ‘AI: More than Human’, and the 2021 Athens Biennale. Amy currently works as an editor and translator for the UK contemporary art and philosophy publisher, Urbanomic.

Alexandra (Sasha) Anikina is a media theorist and artist whose work focuses on algorithmic and visual culture, affective infrastructures, imaginaries of technology, feminist STS and technological conditions of knowledge production, governance, labour and affect. Recently she has been focused on two bodies of work: one, feminist and decolonial imaginaries of AI and procedural animism; and the other concerned with post-socialist state necropolitics. She is Senior Lecturer in Media Practices at the department of Art and Media Technology in Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton and co-director of Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics research group and Programme Co-Lead for MA Global Media Management. https://linktr.ee/alxanikina

Geoff Cox is Professor of Art and Computational Culture, and co-director of the Center for the Study of the Networked Image (CSNI) at London South Bank University, as well as adjunct at Aarhus University. Hisesearch interests lie broadly across the fields of software studies, image politics, experimental publishing and AI literacy. https://www.centreforthestudyof.net/  

The event will be hybrid and recorded. It is organised by Dr Alexandra Anikina as the first in the series of AI conversations hosted by Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics research group (University of Southampton) and the Centre for the Study of the Networked Image (London South Bank University). The event is supported by Web Science Institute.

“The Chronicles of Xenosocialist AI”: Towards Feminist and Decolonial AI with Artistic Research and Creative Methods

“The Chronicles of Xenosocialist AI”: Towards Feminist and Decolonial AI with Artistic Research and Creative Methods

Thursday 23 May, Winchester School of Art, Lecture Theatre B & Online

Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics research group hosts a workshop and a half-day informal symposium dedicated to the use of artistic research, science fiction, future studies and other creative methods in researching cultural approaches to AI and decolonial and feminist AI imaginaries. 

11.00-13.00 – Workshop “Other Futures: Science Fiction Methods for Technopolitical Imagination”

This workshop is aimed at employing methods from science fiction writing, future studies and speculative design to engage in experimental ‘version-making’ and imaginaries of the future. It offers a series of collective exercises (that can be also retained as thinking tools) to engage with technopolitical visions of the future that go beyond binary options of utopia or dystopia, but rather towards complex and productive versions that can be tweaked, used in storytelling and theory-fiction or applied to alternative imaginaries of AI.

13.00-14.00 – Lunch

14.00-14.50 – Session 1, “The Chronicles of Xenosocialist AI” – Laura Trilla, Gustavo Collado, Mandus Ridefelt, Sasha Anikina, Nupur Doshi

“The Chronicles of Xenosocialist AI” is a collaborative world-building project aimed at imagining micropolitical narratives, visual cultures, non-state infrastructures and new relationalities of a potential xenosocialist AI (encountering the human-inhabited Earth) could be, drawing on science fiction methods and decolonial and feminist approaches. It was developed as a fictional radio station, prompt manifesto and mixed media installation in Medialab Matadero, Madrid.

15.00-16.00 – Session 2, Decolonial and Feminist AI Imaginaries: Francis Gene-Rowe, Mandus Ridefelt, Yadira Sanchez Benitez

Francis Gene-Rowe, Against Coercive Computation: Imagining Daoist AI

Mandus Ridefelt, Mutual Hearing Aid

Yadira Sanchez Benitez, Land based algorithmic ecologies

16.15-17.15 – Keynote by Maya Indira Ganesh “On the limits of knowing in AI times”

Dr Maya Indira Ganesh is a technology researcher and writer whose work investigates the social, cultural, and political implications of the ‘becoming-human’ of machines, and vice versa. Maya spent 15 years working at the intersection of gender justice, technology, and human rights with Indian and international NGOs.

Networking and drinks

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This event is organised by Dr Alexandra Anikina and Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics group (Department of Art and Media Technology, Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton) and supported by Web Science Institute and Medialab Matadero, Madrid.

Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton combines expertise in web science, data science and artificial intelligence to study the relationship between society and the largest information system in history: the World Wide Web.

Medialab Matadero, formerly known as Medialab Prado, is a cultural space and citizen lab in Madrid (Spain). It was created by the Madrid City Council in 2000, growing since then into a leading center for citizen innovation. It follows a participatory approach, using collective intelligence methods (developed in living labs) and fast prototyping tools such as fab labs, to use and co-create digital commons.

Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics – Seminar

April 16, 2024 | 14:15 CET

Aarhus University

Welcome to this seminar with four guest talks on critical infrastructures and image politics by scholars and artists from the UK: Alexandra Anikina, Kwame Phillips, Stephen Cornford, and Geoff Cox. The Digital Aesthetics Research Centre and the Centre for Aesthetics of AI Images are the local hosts of this seminar and the visit.

The seminar will explore Critical Infrastructures and Image Politics from multiple perspectives derived from a newly established research group at Winchester School of Art (University of Southampton). Along with the Centre for the Study of the Networked Image at LSBU and the Digital Aesthetics Research Centre (DARC) at Aarhus University, we are exploring collective and decentred forms of research. 

This seminar will address the politics of images and sound as objects of research captured by various digital and scientific apparatuses and infrastructures. The presentations feature approaches grounded in artistic research, activist-focused sensory media and practices of ‘networking’ and ‘infrastructuring’ the university. The approaches are underpinned by an interest in collaborative modes of work that provide provocative approaches to audiovisual culture, as well as interrogating the very context of production of such knowledge in and beyond universities.

https://cc.au.dk/aktuelt/arrangementer/vis-arrangement/artikel/critical-infrastructures-and-image-politics-seminar-1

Federating Research: CIIP x CSNI x DARC

December 01, 2023 | 10:00 GMT

Winchester School of Art

A panel discussion between Dr Alexandra Anikina, Dr Stephen Cornford, Professor Geoff Cox (London South Bank), and Professor Jussi Parikka (Aarhus) on the relationships between image and infrastructure.

Remote Vision: Stephen Cornford & Harun Farocki screening

November 06, 2023 | 18:30 AEDT

Cell Block Theatre, National Art School, Sydney

Photographic imaging technologies have long been associated with important historical shifts in art practice. Cornford’s Spectral Indexand Farocki’s War at a Distanceexemplifythis legacy of artists reflecting on the role of new and developing imaging technologies in the contemporary world. The screening will be followed by a discussion with Cornford.

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