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This program brings together artists, curators, and writers in the US and Asia who were involved in cyberfeminist conversations on and offline during the early 2000s, including artists exhibiting in feminist contexts, moderators of feminist listservs, and organizers of cyberarts labs. In addition to parsing feminist interventions into cyberculture—including postcolonial critiques of virtuality and biotech, the material life of the internet, and questions of reproduction and labor—the panel also reflects on historical returns to and reconstructions of these contexts today. Speakers include Irina Aristarkhova, Maria Fernández, Mindy Seu, and Margaret Tan.Â
This program is curated by Jeannine Tang as part of the Singapore Biennale 2022 named Natasha, organized by the Singapore Art Museum, with support from SAM Residencies. Co-presented with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School, New York.
The SWEET PEA: YOUR OTHER PROGENYÂ features conversations between art and critical technoscience on intelligence, knowledge, and capacity. Each panel features artists and theorists who have troubled commonplace cultural investments in notions of intelligence, gender, sex and race as predictably inherited characteristics, by way of social questions of kinship, reproduction and labor. Across the hubs and labs of the university, spaces of interaction online and within the digital image, their work has traversed disciplines and forged uncommon kinships and collaborations. By bringing together technologies of machine and human intelligence with their symbolic, social and metaphoric worlds, these speakers weave together multiple feminisms on/offline, work between scientists and artists, relations of family and relationships with machines, entanglements between the living and (un)dead.
The title of this series cites Francis Galton’s 1875 growing of sweet peas to calculate the difference in weights between mother peas and their offspring, and his theorizations that variance between families nonetheless combined to produce a normally distributed population. Galton would subsequently substitute human characteristics for the use of sweet peas, producing eugenicist theories of human ancestral hereditary and earlier biometrical methods, which today traverse population sciences across technological, biological and social domains. Not only have sweet peas existed as a food source and subject for the development of technoscientific method, they have also since become an affectionate endearment, applied especially to young kin, offspring and companion pets. The storied life of sweet peas as subject and cultural metaphor arguably extends into the present, through advancements in technoscience and predictive temporalities, across smart technology and AI’s resuscitation of racial sciences of craniotomy and phrenology, the feminization of digital assistance and companion robotics, fears of racial contamination and the unruliness of multiplicitous, indeterminate sex.Â
The work gathered here reflect strands of critical experimentalism in contemporary art in conjunction with technoscientific practice, while incorporating reflexive approaches to methods and machines, particularly with regards to their effects upon corporeal bodies and social identity, and enmeshment with population control across labor, welfare, health and security. Against the enclosure of futurity by cloned and coded pasts, these speakers have not shied away from machine and nonhuman forms of intelligence, but sought them out, while finding other ways to co-exist with other peoples, zombies, robots, and ancestors. Working beyond colonial dynamics of command and control, these speakers have given us other progenies, and offered them–and ourselves–other, more surprising futures.
The program will be followed by additional programs including Living and Undead Labor: A Conversation with David Bering-Porter & Aarti Sunder and Binary Calculations are Inadequate to Assess Us: A Workshop with Stephanie Dinkins. For more information the Singapore Biennial and registration to other programs part of Sweet Pea: Your Other Progeny, please visit this link.Â
Co-presented by Vera List Center for Art and Politics at Schools of Public Engagement.Â
By joining this online event, you will be prompted to accept Zoom Terms of Service. If the session is recorded, you acknowledge that by participating, your name, phone number, and profile picture might be visible to the public. You can customize your personal information when creating your Zoom account. The New School may use any recorded material from the event.
The Vera List Center tries to share its programs as widely as possible, which means recording our programming and making it available on the Vera List Center and The New School websites. By attending the event, you consent to photography, audio recording, video recording and its/their release, publication, or exhibition. You can view past Vera List Center events at veralistcenter.org/events/past.
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