Possible Bodies

Stuttgart

Iteration I: collective inventorying

Schloss Solitude/Projektraum Römerstraße Stuttgart, May 2017

Intersecting issues of race, gender, class, species and ability resurface in the techno-ecologies of 3D.

From 6 until 14 May, a transdisciplinary group of researchers gathers in Akademie Schloss Solitude to collaboratively activate an inventory of software, games, animations, concepts, artworks and digital documents. This activation happens through software performance, collective reading, bug reporting, somatic development and disobedient action research.

Possible Bodies interrogates corpo-realities and their orientation through parametric interfaces and looks at anatomies that are computationally constrained by the requirements of mesh-modeling. It invites the generation of concepts and experimental renderings, wild combinations and digital and non-digital prototypes for different embodiments.

This project starts from the very concrete and at the same time fictional entities that "bodies" are. What are the semiotic-material conditions of possibility that render them present? This question becomes especially pertinent in contact with the performative as well as representational practices of 3D-scanning, modeling and printing that shape the industrial production of imaginaries within the military, gamer, cinematic and pharmacopornographic complex.

Possible Bodies is initiated by Jara Rocha and Femke Snelting. With: Maike Klein, Phil Langley, Maximilian Lehner, Mar Medina, Simone C. Niquille, Tirso Orive, Helen Pritchard, Sina Seifee, Sophie-Charlotte Thieroff, Wendy Van Wynsberghe, François Zajéga, Adva Zakai.

On Friday 12 May, the inventory will be opened up to the public with a workshop, guided tours and performative lectures at Projektraum Römerstraße 2A:

Free and open entry. For the workshop, please register until May 5, 2017: + 49 (0) 711 99619 134

The event takes place within the framework of the art, science & business program at Akademie Schloss Solitude and was developed by former fellow Femke Snelting as part of her research period in 2015. This iteration of Possible Bodies is made possible with support from Akademie Schloss Solitude and the Flemish Government.

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