lezing/discussie
2012
Lezingenreeks: Facing Forward #7…

Lezingenreeks: Facing Forward #7 'FUTURE'S FUTURE'

31.05.2012
De Oude Lutherse Kerk, Amsterdam

Design: Felix Weigand

Na de succesvolle lezingenreeksen "Right About Now: Art & Theory in the 1990s" en "Now is the Time: Art & Theory in the 21st Century", presenteren het Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, de Universiteit van Amsterdam, de Appel arts centre, W139, Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam en Metropolis M, gezamenlijk de nieuwe lezingen- en debattenreeks "Facing Forward: Art & Theory from a Future Perspective".

Deze lezingenreeks en publicatie stellen de kunst en theorie van de toekomst ter discussie aan de hand van zeven thema’s, die samen een mogelijk toekomstscenario van hedendaagse kunst en theorie schetsen.

Gedurende zeven avonden zullen vermaarde internationale sprekers reflecteren op de thema’s Future Tech, Future Image, Future History, Future Freedom, Future Museum, Future City en uiteindelijk, Future’s Future.

Deel 7: "Future’s Future".

Sprekers: Maria Barnas, Hassnae Bouazza, Maarten Doorman, Melissa Gronlund, Metahaven, Snejanka Mihaylova, Katharina Neuburger, Patricia Pisters, Ding Ren, Simon Rogers, Oona Strathern, Timotheus Vermeulen, Juha van‘t Zelfde en vele anderen.

Moderator: Ann Demeester

Our contemporary view of the world is changing rapidly, due to drastic shifts in power relations, discourses, and the role of technology and communication in everyday life. Given the current state of global affairs – revolutions in the Arab world, the rise of populism and neoliberalism in Western Europe, the shift of global power from Europe and North-America to Asia and Latin America, and the primacy of mass communication methods, to name just a few important recent developments – the future has become increasingly precarious. To face forward is not that simple anymore. How are we able to look at the future when the present is so uncertain and unstable? And if we do fix our gaze on the horizon, what and how do we see – is it utopia or dystopia, a purely speculative view or a mere extrapolation of current events? Ultimately, can the future be a productive model for visualizing contemporary power structures, global shifts, and changing relations?

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