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Sensing Urban Matter

Architektūros fondas participates in the Future Architecture Platform programme Landscapes of Care by engaging with practitioners of experimental spatial practice and art with research on a variety of environmental technologies and explore the relations between cities, landscapes and information flows. Sensing Urban Matter aims to present different creative approaches to urban space and its materiality and how it is connected to wider ecosystems and global networks of logistics, through which matter, raw resources and data circulate.

 

 

The idea of a smart city propels the evolution of these networks by turning urban objects and materials into digital data. However, according to media scholar Shannon Mattern, urban spaces have combined analogue and digital spheres, “dirt and data, ether and ore”, in a smart way since ancient times. Departing from the tension between urban locality and global networks, the pre-digital smartness of the city and its materials, Sensing Urban Matter aims to research new perspectives on the relationship between urban development and natural systems, exploring urban spaces through their material and ecological histories, presents and futures and the exchanges they enable beyond the algorithmic, corporate technology-based smart space.

 

 

Movement of matter

 

Could urban materials offer proliferation of information in a different way than the information infrastructures that rely on extraction of resources—matter being turned into commodities—as well as obfuscate the relation to the faraway places where the urban materials come from? 

 

As the materiality of our cities pinpoint to a variety of extractive relationships, in certain cultural discourses, one got already used to works exploring these origin sites of the city - not only stone mines, but also sites where rare minerals or copper is being extracted that is crucial for the digital infrastructures that became enmeshed in the cities as well.

 

The relationships that the built environment entails—from brick house to a clay deposit somewhere else—are even more complicated if one looks further into other technonatural environments of the city which may be even more elusive than the skyscraper hiding its origin pit. The movement of matter also ranges differently in the degree up to how much it can be contained within human control, even if it is induced by human actions. Whereas the construction industry humanly moves matter from one place to another; materials, particles, elements have agency on their own, depositing themselves in unforeseen bodies and landscapes, their paths escaping human control. 

 

 

Human agency and communities

 

Material flows not only connect us to distant landscapes, it is also a connection to a distant community, where these relationships rarely are symmetrical or solidary. How do human communities actively or passively participate in these material flows and what are the ways to account for these experiences, speculating on organizational structures that bring democratic decision-makers together or foster communities? 

 

 

Creativity of unexpected relations

 

Through the contributions of FAP fellows discovering this range of material flows and the relations they forge, we are looking into creative approaches that not only map the extractivist practices, document origin sites or uncover histories; but also work with methodologies that make new connections and relationships between materiality of urban technoecological environment and human agency.

 

 

In 2021, Architektūros fondas has invited seven collectives (10 creatives) from the Future Architecture Platform to develop and present their ideas in a few different formats: podcast and radio conversations, publication as well as engagements with local urban sites in Lithuania.

 

 

A series of podcast conversations in English will be hosted on Architektūros fondas podcast platform Aikštėje.lt. These podcast conversations will bring Future Architecture Platform fellows Rosa Whiteley, Nico Alexandroff, furii studio, Hanna Husberg and Agata Marzecova, Ivana Kralikova, Austin Wade Smith and Studio Pararaum together in dialogue with local initiatives, activists and researchers in Lithuania. The majority of the podcast participants will later be invited to contribute their research to Architektūros fondas publication in a form of visual or discursive essay. Ivana Kralikova is invited also to contribute in developing remotely an exploration of urban soil ecosystems in Kaunas, Lithuania, whereas Hanna Husberg and Agata Marzecova will run recurring online series of talks Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability, and will explore how collective environmental and social imaginaries, hopes and fantasies are shaped through invisible, yet material and very influential, infrastructure and novel ecosystems emerging at the nexus of political economy, communication technologies and the atmospheric medium in its role as a carrier of the electromagnetic spectrum. The publication and results of fieldwork with Ivana Kralikova and the talk series with Hanna Husberg and Agata Marzecova will be presented in Fall 2021.

 

 

PROGRAMME EVENTS: 

 

September 15 Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability with Vladan Joler

September 18 Urban Hike “Dig Where You Stand: Journey into neoenvironmental Kaunas” 

September 22 Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability with Miglė Bareikytė

September 29 Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability with Rahul Mukherjee

October 6 Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability with Adriana Knouf

 

Architektūros fondas' programme Sensing Urban Matter is part of the Future Architecture platform and European Architecture programme 2021, and is co-funded by the Creative Europe Programme of the European Union and a strategic partner Lithuanian Council for Culture. Media partner - Lithuanian national television and radio.

Sensing Urban Matter: Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability

A series of online talks with Vladan Joler, Miglė Bareikytė, Rahul Mukherjee and Adriana Knouf

 

15 September - 22 September - 29 September - 6 October 2021

19.00 EET (18.00 CET) on Zoom: EVENT LINK

 

 

*If you would like to receive a notification/reminder before one, some or each of the talks, please register here (optional): REGISTRATION

 

 

Architektūros fondas invites you to join for a recurring series of talks Fantasies of Seamless Interoperability starting on September 15 as part of Sensing Urban Matter programme.  It is a series of four weekly online talks organized by the art-science collaborative Towards Atmospheric Care which explore how collective environmental and social imaginaries, hopes and fantasies are shaped through invisible, yet material and very influential, infrastructure and novel ecosystems emerging at the nexus of political economy, communication technologies and the atmospheric medium in its role as a carrier of the electromagnetic spectrum.

 

 

Used as a technical term, 'seamless interoperability’ describes the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) and computer-based tools to achieve information and data exchange between heterogeneous and geographically distributed devices, products, technologies, or systems and organizations. Yet, seamless interoperability is not only about streamlining existing technical operations. Nor is it immaterial any more than the wireless transmission technologies it relies on (such as the emerging 5G and the projected 6G network) which are conditioned by heavily material networks of wires, cables, data centers and protocols. Rather, it is a sociotechnical vision, linked to specific ideologies and material realities with significant transformational impact on society and human environment interactions.

 

 

While the technofuturistic projections of the ICT-sector promote efficiency and sustainability deemed profitable for all, the technical complexity of these digital ecosystems render them inaccessible for most people. For the nonexpert – mostly conceived of as the customer – the quirks of technological determinism and modes of mediation, translation and erasure remain sealed within a black box.  

 

 

Unsettling the ‘seamless’ imaginary of communication technologies, this series of talks looks at the materiality and historical specificity of wireless networks, at noise, errors and leaks with the intent to broaden the discussion on what technoecological networks and digital ecologies we need for communal concerns in the ongoing ecological and social crisis. It departs from a conviction that non-expert engagement – before novel technoecosytems are firmly settled in material, economic and political path dependencies – is crucial to explore possibilities of reparative approaches and alternative futures to the high-tech enclosure of the electromagnetic domain. 

 

 

The four sessions will reflect on Signal space with Vladan Joler (15.9), Maintenance of the media technology with Miglė Bareikytė (22.9), Radiant infrastructures with Rahul Mukherjee (29.9) and Noise with Adriana Knouf (6.10). Rather than an overview of the subject matter, the series proposes four distinct and different perspectives and practices that bring together critical mapping, conceptual analysis, research and art. Conceived as an exercise in co-learning, the speakers will all share additional resources (texts, work, videos) available HERE (for the duration of the series).

 

 

Through artistic-scientific investigation, the long-term collaboration Towards Atmospheric Care between researcher in ecology Agata Marzecova (Tallinn) and visual artist Hanna Husberg (Stockholm) explores air as a naturalcultural phenomenon, situated in the nexus of media, science and technological mediation. Using installation, performance, writing and critical analysis, they seek to examine the overlapping boundaries between the aesthetic, science and politics of air and the atmosphere. In addition to artistic and academic outcomes, they have developed post-disciplinary pedagogical approaches, including joint teaching of Urban Ethnography at the Estonian Academy of Arts, and co-learning workshops such as the Heavens Field_Notes Laboratory for the Finnish Bioart Society. Their collaboration has been supported by the Technosphere Campus (HKW Berlin, 2016),  The Seed Box (Mistra-Formas Collaboratory, 2017), the Bernadotte Fellowship (Konstakademien, 2019-20), Kone Foundation (2020-22), and several residencies.

 

Sensing Urban Matter project aims to present different creative approaches to urban space and its materiality and how it is connected to wider ecosystems and global networks of logistics, through which matter, raw resources and data circulate. Besides the online talk series, Sensing Urban Matter will present podcast and radio conversations, publication as well as engagements with local urban sites in Lithuania in autumn 2021.

 

 

Sensing Urban Matter is part of the Future Architecture Platform and European Architecture programme 2021, co-funded by the Creative Europe Programme of the European Union and a strategic partner Lithuanian Council for Culture.

Building Narratives

Architektūros fondas‘ programme Building Narratives is focusing on investigating the relationship between architecture and stories surrounding it. Within the programme of 2020 and the series of events taking place from August 27th till September 5th Architektūros fondas is looking for untold stories, projects making new connections, objects changing their meanings, and other cases demonstrating the power of narration. 

 

Buildings aren’t shaped by mortar and concrete anymore – crucial and sometimes the most important ingredient is narrative. Whether it is purely a PR product or an organic construct it creates perceptions and shapes the way we see and understand our environment. Hearing, reading or assembling a narrative from smaller pieces helps us to determine if something is good, useful and even beautiful. At the same time, changing narrative has the power to change perceptions of our environment. Bad can become good, ugly-beautiful, all without any changes in physical structure.

 

As a new narrative has the power to transform architecture on its own, it becomes extremely important to understand how different ways of talking about architecture can shape its future. Therefore  Architektūros fondas is seeking to discover personal narratives and encourage the creatives to get involved in this affair.

 

In 2020, Architektūros fondas will collaborate with 6 Future Architecture creatives and collectives researching the topic, exploring curatorial methods and tools, experimenting with, and creating new approaches for the future of narration. Invited creatives will elaborate their projects in three stages: 

 

* site-specific researches, helping to contextualise and adopt their primary or brand new ideas within the Lithuanian context;

* event series dedicated to present the results of research and experiments

* contributions to the (online) publication with the texts, visual stories or films at the end of the year. 

 

The publication issued at the end of the year will not only contain explorations of the creatives but also will include texts of invited authors, contributing the sub-topics of Building Narratives. 

 

Building Narratives programme is a strong creative impulse for merging the ongoing projects of Architektūros fondas and their methods, while looking for common ground among experiments of architecture curating, podcasts and publications, Architecture talk series, and others. While running this programme Architektūros fondas is acting as a moderator and as a creative link between the Future Architecture creatives and members, incorporating its expertise in being an open and voluntary platform, and holding experience and knowledge to host bottom-up initiatives and networking.

 

Curators of the programme: Andrius Ropolas, Indrė Ruseckaitė, Justinas Dūdėnas, Sandra Šlepikaitė. 

 

Event series Building Naratives is a part of the Future Architecture platform and European Architecture programme 2020, co-funded by the Creative Europe Programme of the European Union.

Architektūros fondas' strategic partner is Lithuanian Council for Culture.

Projects in Eiguliai are organized in collaboration with Kaunas 2022 programmes "Modernism for Future" and "All as One".