Responding to the open call on the theme: 'Artists, Designers and the Philosophers we Love'
Artists
 have long been interested in the field of philosophy; it has been 
subject to both fascination and scepticism. Artists are found quoting 
nuggets of philosophy as inspiration and as context for their work. For 
some, philosophers are names to conjure with, to add theoretical ballast
 to their perspectives, whereas for others philosophy is a vital of 
source of criticality, offering a new perspective on an individual's art
 and the context in which we find ourselves. For generations, artists 
have looked to philosophers of the Frankfurt School to understand the 
art-society-politics nexus and their role in it, and artists, such as 
Joseph Kosuth, engage with the Analytic tradition. In Art After Philosophy (1969) Kosuth responds to AJ Ayer.
Philosophy
 comprises one aspect of an art education at BA and MA levels, and for 
many, a Doctorate in Fine Art practice, requires a serious engagement 
with philosophy in addition to theory, history and other disciplines. 
Can artists contribute meaningfully to philosophy? Can there be a 
productive relationship between art practice and philosophy that goes 
beyond name-checking the Good and the Great, and merely illustrating a 
well-honed philosophical phrase? What is it for an artist to love a 
philosopher? In this workshop, we want to explore the relationship 
between art and philosophy from the perspective of practicing artists. 
Our aim is to examine how art can engage with, and contribute to the 
theoretical problems of philosophy, and offer a critical rethinking of 
philosophies re-imagined and interrogated through art practice. The 
symposium is open to both senior and early-career artists and scholars 
who are planning or conducting projects in philosophy and art.
20-21 June 2019 
School of Creative Arts, College Lane, Hatfield
||  Tickets available through 
UHArts ||  £10 and nothing for students  ||
Thurs 20 June
16.15 KeynoteDr Kerry Power (PhD) : How can diffraction support art making process? 
 Monash University | Melbourne | Australia
17.15 Teodora Sinziana Fartan : Hyper Chaos - Exploring New Media Art through the Lens of Science Fiction, Speculative Realism and Weird Science
MFA ; student | Goldsmith’s College | University of London
17.35 Stephen Sewell : The Impoverishment of Truth 
 Independent Artist | USA
17.55
Prof Simeon Nelson : Process and Materiality - Solid Speculation in a Fluid World
 University of Hertfordshire | UK
18.15 Q+A panel discussion
18.30 Drinks Reception
Fri 21 June
10.00
Kerry Purcell : Risking Love - Encountering the universal through the local 
 University of Hertfordshire | UK
10.20
Dave Ball : Doing Things Alphabetically - Sartre’s Autodidact and Tactically Absurd Practice
PhD candidate | Winchester School of Art | UK
10.40Lisa Taliano : Disorientation Re/presentation
Independent Artist | USA
11.00 Q+A panel discussion
11.20 Break 
11.40Alison Pasquariello : Verbier Art Summit: a multi-directional exploration of Philosophy and Art
 Verbier Art Summit | Switzerland
12.00Shannon Forrester : Can painting be words? Can the philosophical be material?
 PhD candidate | Royal College of Art | UK
12.20Dr Anna Walker (PhD) : The haptic visual - making sense of the world through touch or being touched
Plymouth University | UK
12.40 ;Q+A panel discussion
13.00 Lunch
14.00Chicks on Speed : Facing the Gesamtkunstwerk foot first
Prof Alexandra Murray-Leslie (PhD) | Trondheim Academy of Fine Art p;| Norway
Sophia Efstathiou | Postdoctoral Fellow in Applied Ethics | Norwegian University of Science and Technology 
Prof Tina Frank | University of Art and Design, Linz | Austria
14.20 Yamu Wang : A Reader’s Response to A Thousand Plateaus’ Introduction to Rhizome - & ICH & I & CH & 
 Zurich University of the Arts | Switzerland
14.40Jaspal Birdi : Being connected is less costly than being engaged
 Independent Artist | Italy
15.00 Q+A panel discussion
15.20 Break
15.40Maria Patricia Tinajero : When Dirt Becomes Soil - Ecological Art Practices as a New Philosophy of Praxis in Age of the Anthropocene 
 PhD candidate | Institute for Doctoral Studies in Visual Art Philosophy in Portland, Maine | USA
16.00 Dr Sebastian Mühl (PhD) : On aesthetic indeterminacy
Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt | Austria
16.20Mimi Cabell : I'll work out tomorrow 
 Assistant Professor | Rhode Island School of Design | USA
16.40 Q+A panel discussion17.00 end

Abstracts
 Kerry Power : How can diffraction support art-making process? 
 The application of diffraction in a theoretical context is supported by
 the physical phenomenon The physical phenomenon occurs around us just 
as light, sound or water for example encounter matter Picture a single 
light source illuminating an object and casting a shadow. The shadow 
fringe displays overlapping light waves that intensify at the edge. 
Similarly, waves of light can compete and cancel each other out, 
creating a diffractive pattern. This example can be used as a starting 
point to understand how diffraction can be used as a conceptual model 
and applied to knowledge formation (Barad, 2007).
In the keynote 
presentation, I work through Karen Barad’s (2007) theorisation of 
diffraction and interrogate my application as an art-making tool. My use
 of diffraction in this context demonstrates a combustible sum of 
melting, active, sifting and overlapping applications to embrace 
difference as co-constitutive or intra-active (Barad, 2007). My artwork 
is projected throughout the presentation to support this process.
Kerry
 Power works in the faculty of education at Monash University, 
Australia. She has taught early years, primary and secondary pre-service
 teachers educational research and art education. She is a practicing 
artist and researcher working primarily in the field of digital 
artmaking, educator virtual intra-action and new materialism.
 Teodora Sinziana Fartan : Hyper Chaos - Exploring New Media Art through
 the Lens of Science Fiction, Speculative Realism and Weird Science 
This
 paper aims to explore the newly-formed grey areas where emergent new 
media art practices overlap with speculative realism tendencies, weird 
science ideologies and futuristic perspectives. Taking cues from 
thinkers such as Eugene Thacker, Simon O’Sullivan, Raymond Williams and 
Gilbert Simondon, this research aims to highlight the ways in which new 
forms of media art question, interpret and attempt to invent the future,
 both at a macro and micro level, sometimes even rethinking its entire 
ontological status.
With a particular focus on ideas of fictioning, 
fabulating and creating alternative imaginaries in order to disseminate 
what it means to be human today, or perhaps better said, in a vague 
tomorrow, this paper attempts to map the new speculative turn as 
reflected in new media art practice, whilst highlighting the influence 
of science fiction on speculative art tendencies. Ultimately, the aim of
 this research is to map the intertwining of speculative and weird 
realism with ideas such as O’Sullivan’s ‘science fictioning’ and new 
forms of computational and electronic media in order to highlight the 
ways in which these practices inform and enrich each other.
Teodora
 is currently a graduate MFA student at Goldsmith’s, University of 
London. Her research interests include speculative realism, materialism,
 the weird,the Anthropocene, theology in the technological context, 
myth-science, fictioning and sensing. Her previous work has been featured
 in exhibitions across Romania, Hungary, the UKand Australia, and 
features in both permanent and private collections. In 2016, she was 
shortlisted for the Australian Contemporary Art Awards for her 
exploration of the use of new materials within painting. Most recently, 
she has exhibited at the ‘Echosystems’ Goldsmiths Computational Arts 
Degree show in London, UK and participated in a panel discussing affect 
titled ‘Working Things Through and Feeling Things Out: Six Statements on
 Computation, Translation and Experience’ at the 2019 Transmediale 
Festival of Art Digital Culture
 Stephen Sewell : The Impoverishment of Truth 
I
 propose to discuss Roy Bhaskar’s critical realism and the need for 
artists to engage in the making of truth claims. Drawing on Bhaskar’s 
work the talk will first address the ways in which art/cultural 
production does not exist in an autonomous relationship to historical 
reality but is inextricably bound up in it. Furthermore it will 
highlight the fact that at any specific historical conjuncture there is 
always a dominant hegemonic power that structures the conditions of 
political, economic, and social practices. If this dominant hegemony is 
to be contested we need to be able to make claims regarding how it works
 to reproduce itself and maintain dominance, why it is insufficient, 
what an alternative project looks like and why it is necessary. Bhaskar 
draws on Marx and Althusser to make a case for the existence of an 
ontologically real space outside of our experience of it and the need 
for a depth model of ontology in order to discover and understand the 
structural forces/causal laws that determine our existence. Once 
discovered they must be made knowable through a dialectical relationship
 between epistemology and ontology. I will argue that the site of 
art/cultural production is precisely where these structures can be 
represented and made knowable in order to contest dominant ideological 
and hegemonic forces while avoiding the essentialism and relativism that
 has led to the current impoverishment of truth that marks our present 
historical moment.
Stephen Sewell is a Brooklyn-based artist, 
filmmaker and educator. He received his MFA from the University of 
Washington and is an alum of the Whitney Independent Study Program, 
Mountain School of Arts, and Art & Law Program. His works have been 
exhibited nationally and internationally and he has lectured and 
participated on panel discussions at Queens Museum, Pacific Northwest 
College of Art, MoMA PS1 Print Shop, and Cornish College of Arts. He 
currently works at the Whitney Independent Study Program.
 Simeon Nelson: Process and Materiality - Solid Speculation in a Fluid World 
I
 will highlight the influence of the process/organismic philosophy of A.
 N. Whitehead; his notions of pan-experientialism and critique of simple
 location, the Radical Empiricism of William James in which relations 
between things are as real and prominent as the things themselves 
including the observer, and other significant sources and inspirations 
including phenomenology, cybernetics and complex emergent systems. 
 
The process view embraces the world, its relations, its process of 
becoming and crucially one’s own being in that same world 
simultaneously. This and the radical empirical view is that all 
elements, however one divides them up for convenience and conceptual 
clarity are intrinsically monistic. Subject and object, mind and matter 
are parts of the greater whole and are of the same stuff. Object needs 
subject in order to be so, and subject needs object in order to be so, 
both are abstractions distilled from experience. I will touch on how 
variations on this worldview in Neo-Platonism, Taoism and forms of 
animism have influenced my work. 
 Process Philosophy must be seen in
 relation to other schemas so as not to commit the naturalistic fallacy.
 I am thrilled by its grandeur but I am also attracted to atomism as a 
granular aesthetic and what I think of as an interface between 
allopoiesis and autopoiesis - the self-regulating governor of a steam 
engine. 
 I will conclude with creative limitation and freedom. I 
think limitation and partiality are necessary for meaning while freedom -
 a featureless rhizomatic hierarchy of infinite possibility imprisons 
the imagination; a bifurcated or otherwise striated topology gives much 
better grit: it is the very limitations of symbol, circumstance or 
material that bestow power.
 Kerry Purcell : Risking Love - Encountering the universal through the local 
In
 his 2009 book In Praise of Love, Alain Badiou begins with a description
 of some adverts for the French dating site Meetic that he encountered 
on the Paris Métro. These adverts carried the straplines ‘Get love 
without Chance’, ‘Be in love without falling in love’ and ‘Get perfect 
love without suffering’. This ‘safety first’ approach to love is 
symptomatic of a culture that turns away from ideas of the universal 
towards an identitarian position that one’s desires equate with what one
 is willing to accept in the other. Badiou argues that love offers the 
possibility of experiencing difference in its infinity. It is an 
encounter that can be painful, but the outcome can be a rupture with the
 established order (the self) that opens up a space for the radically 
new. Like Mallarmé’s lampbearer, Badiou argues that one must remain 
alert to the potential that love offers to challenge our deeply held 
beliefs of the immutability of our identities.
This paper will 
explore how Badiou’s thought offers a way of thinking about the idea of 
love as a ‘unique trust placed in chance’ (Badiou, 2009: 16). It will 
examine how such a stance can leave us open to individual experience as 
universality. How love of the other (be that another person, a piece of 
art, a book, a riot etc.) offers a possibility to encounter difference 
in its unbounded sublimity.
 Dave Ball : Doing Things Alphabetically: Sartre’s Autodidact and Tactically Absurd Practice The proposed paper presents my ongoing project 
A to Z, drawing parallels with the activities of the Autodidact in Jean-Paul Sartre’s 1938 novel 
Nausea.
 The presentation is informed by my practice-based PhD research into 
absurdity, which is driven through the “tactical” use of absurdity in my
 own work, situated within a wider field of contemporary art and 
philosophical discourse. 
A to Z is a project begun in 2011 
based on the premise of visualising every word in the Concise Oxford 
English dictionary in alphabetical order. Around 10,000 visualisations 
will need to be made, taking around 35 years to complete. 1,788 images 
have so far been made, the most recent being “damage”. The entire 
sequence of A, B and C-words were recently shown at a solo exhibition A 
to Z: The First Seven Years at Gallery Oldham, Manchester. 
Sartre’s novel 
Nausea
 features a character known as the Autodidact, who is discovered to be 
reading the books in the library in alphabetical order. His absurdly 
systematic acquisition of knowledge is, for Sartre, a naïve humanist 
folly – a misplaced faith in the betterment of the self through rational
 learning. 
Performed tactically, however, such absurdity can be 
reimagined as a form of critical practice. A to Z enacts exactly this 
kind of tactical absurdity, functioning less as Sartrean “bad faith” 
than as playful disruption. The work thus “thinks” philosophically 
absurd ideas in a context far removed from their existential origins. 
The presentation will be accompanied by images from A to Z
 
Dave 
Ball is an artist based in Berlin and Wales; he was 
educated at Goldsmiths College, London (MA), and the University of Derby
 (BA), and is currently researching the use of “tactical absurdity” in 
critical (fine) art practice at Winchester School of Art (PhD). He is 
represented by Galerie Art Claims Impulse, Berlin
 
 Lisa Taliano : Disorientation Re/presentation The
 human race has become a geological force. Ecological problems are no 
longer just an issue of our impact on the environment, they’re about our
 impact on the earth’s system. The magnitude of the accelerated 
transformation has turned ecological questions into questions of 
survival and has disoriented us in space and time. The newness of the 
situation and its complexity makes it difficult to fully know what the 
issues are. For that reason, philosophers like Bruno LaTour, Timothy 
Morton and Donna Haraway call on artists to work across disciplines to 
help visualize, come up with a new cosmology, myths, and representations
 of the world to render us sensitive to these issues. 
 This talk 
will focus on the success and failure of Bruno LaTour’s 
interdisciplinary performance lecture – Inside. The performance lecture 
is the result of his working with artists to find a new way of 
representing the world from the inside, as opposed to the world 
represented as a blue globe from outer space. Given that life exists 
within a very thin layer of activity on the earth’s crust, a feeling for
 the sensitivity of this skin is difficult to represent when you imagine
 it from the outside. We are not in a globe, we are on top of a very 
thin layer of the earth. Everything we see and encounter in life exist 
in this tiny critical zone. The artist’s role in the 
scientific/political philosophical situation will be to find ways to 
render ourselves sensitive to this layer.
Alison Pasquariello : Verbier Art Summit: a multi-directional exploration of Philosophy and ArtWhat
 structures will enable meaningful relationships between Philosophy and 
Art? What is the potential in establishing channels for productive 
discourse between the two disciplines? The Verbier Art Summit is an 
international non-profit platform for discourse, bringing together 
thought leaders and leading art world figures in Verbier, Switzerland. 
Each year, the Summit invites a group of speakers with a shared interest
 in an annual theme, in collaboration with a rotating museum director, 
for a weekend of dialogue. In this discussion, Project Manager at the 
Verbier Art Summit, Alison Pasquariello, will present on the impact of 
bringing together philosophers, artists and art world professionals into
 one dialogue.
At the Verbier Art Summit, philosophers have 
introduced academic concepts into the discourse surrounding art, 
deepening conversations whose philosophical grounding was once 
restricted to summarised quotes by the ‘Great’ philosophers. Terminology
 such as ‘indeterminacy’ and ‘ineffability’, having long been studied 
within philosophical disciplines, beautifully facilitated conceptual 
break-throughs among an audience of art world figures at the Summit. Yet
 what does the philosopher have to gain from these encounters, and how 
can cultural projects attract philosophers and keep them engaged? If art
 picks up where Philosophy ends, then we must ask—what is the role of 
Philosophy at art’s end?
Alison will review key examples of 
cross-disciplinary dialogues engaging with Philosophy through innovative
 approaches, in order to investigate the potentialities for 
collaboration within the Philosophy and Art symbiosis.
Alison 
Pasquariello graduated from Boston University with a Bachelor’s in 
Philosophy and Mathematics in 2015, where she conducted original 
research in Libreville, Gabon under the Karbank Fellowship for 
Philosophy Research. In 2017, Alison earned her Master’s in Logic from 
the University of Amsterdam, publishing her interdisciplinary thesis at 
the Institute of Logic, Language, and Computation on interactions 
between culture and cognition, with a focus on time. In November 2017, 
Alison joined the Verbier Art Summit team, where she is now the Project 
Manager. The Verbier Art Summit is a non-profit, international platform 
for discourse in a non-transactional context. The Summit connects 
thought leaders to key figures in the art world to generate innovative 
ideas and drive social change.
Shannon Forrester : Can painting be words? Can the philosophical be material?These
 questions offer a way into imagining what art might offer philosophy 
and what philosophy might offer art. Art has been a major subject of 
philosophy, not because art is somehow uniquely ‘philosophical’ but 
because philosophy, perhaps especially new materialism, is uniquely 
art-like. New materialism examines the dynamic material of life and the 
universe. Reparative painting, a theoretical framework that traces ways 
of looking at and making paintings which seek to subvert marginalization
 based on race, gender, and sexuality bias, while also considering 
socio-political and psycho-emotional dynamics of the individual and the 
matter of their circulation in the assemblages that form existence. 
Reparative painting, the elemental matter that forms it and in a way 
becomes its voice through its human-material-conceptual formation, 
reaches towards an exit from dynamics of exclusion so prolific in the 
contemporary. If we consider Karen Barad’s description of matter as “… 
an imaginative material exploration of non/being, creatively 
regenerative, an ongoing trans*/formation. Matter is a condensation of 
dispersed and multiple beings-times, where the future and past are 
diffracted into now, into each moment.” we can begin to understand just 
how painterly new materialism might be, as painting transforms, subverts
 time, presents complexity, intensifies and disperses, puts experience, 
knowledge, and material in a dance echoing the fabric of life and the 
universe.
Shannon Forrester is an international artist working in 
the expanded field of painting and a practice-led researcher developing 
reparative turn theory in painting. Forrester has a BFA from School of 
the Art Institute of Chicago, an MFA Painting as well as a Graduate 
Certificate in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGS) from Boston 
University and is currently at RCA completing Reparative Painting, 
Identity, Society, and the Individual, a practice-led PhD dissertation. 
Their interdisciplinary work incorporates painting, curation, and 
writing at the intersection of WGS, new materialism, and cultural 
studies. It traces the potential of the reparative turn in painting, 
aesthetics, and narrative to subvert dynamics of gender, sexuality, and 
race that suppress human flourishing.
Anna Walker: The haptic visual - making sense of the world through touch or being touchedFor
 this paper. I will explore an inextricable link between art and 
philosophy. In some instances, they are so intertwined that it becomes 
impossible to separate one from the other without a loss of sense, 
sensation and therefore meaning. Layering Derrida’s theories of 
spectrality upon Laura Marks’ exploration of the haptic visual I will 
discuss the Deleuzian concept: "when sight discovers in itself a 
specific function of touch that is uniquely its own, distinct from its 
optical function' (2005, p.109). I will also address the Freudian notion
 of Nachträglichkeit—the concept of deferred action, to experience what 
yet remains to come: a ghost of or from the future. The spectral for 
Derrida does not arise out of social or biological death, rather it 
emerges from a future absence where the ghost is neither present nor 
absent, but both at the same time—a presence negated by absence. In his 
words: 
 To haunt does not mean to be present, and it is necessary to
 introduce haunting into the very construction of a concept. Of every 
concept, beginning with the concepts of being and time (Derrida, 1994, 
p.13). 
 Phenomenologically, the haptic is a form of the visual that 
muddies intersubjective boundaries (Marks, 2002: 17), whilst 
psychoanalytically it is an aspect of the visual that moves between 
identification and immersion. Marks emphasises the tactile and 
contagious quality of haptic imagery as something viewers brush up 
against like another body. She writes: "The words contact, contingent, 
and contagion all share the Latin root contingere, ‘to have contact 
with; pollute; befall’’ (2000, p. xii). This paper will be accompanied 
by sound/ and or moving imagery.
Anna Walker, PhD, is an artist, 
writer and researcher working in multi-media, primarily sound and moving
 imagery. She was awarded an MA in Fine Art from Southampton University 
in 1998, and a certificate in Psychotherapy from CBPC, Cambridge, in 
2010. An interest in the effects of trauma on the body, developed during
 her work as a psychotherapist, led her to a PhD in Arts and Media at 
Plymouth University, which she completed in May 2017. Her arts-practice 
balances the auto-ethnographic with the critical, utilising personal 
experiences to facilitate a greater understanding of memory, trauma and 
its wider cultural implications. She has been exploring trauma in her 
work for many years, how the body responds to overwhelming traumatic and
 stressful situations and how it reorganises itself to cope with or 
manage the trauma. Most recently research has focused on 
intergenerational trauma, i.e. what gets passed down from generation to 
generation. For example, the moving Image work: ‘Breathe Wind into Me, 
Chapter 1’ (2018-2019), exhibited as part of Making Space at Fabrica 
Gallery, Brighton, is a loosely, flowing, stream of consciousness that 
questions what arises physically and philosophically when life is 
stripped back to the bare essentials. She is a contributing researcher 
of Transtechnology Research at Plymouth University.
Chicks on Speed : Facing the Gesamtkunstwerk foot first 
 Our talk investigates the scope of common ideas about the human body 
through ‘gesamtkunstwerk’—all-embracing artworks that adopt and make use
 of many art-forms and disciplines. The collaborating authors from the 
fields of pop music, visualisation and philosophy suggest that 
philosophical concepts can be extended and expressed simultaneously 
through music, data visualisations, costume, choreography and 
performance, adding new faces to the meaning and expression of 
philosophical ideas. 
 We focus on common ideas around the feet, and 
how these become transfigured, found and founded into a series of 
art-and-science works: the series of Computer Enhanced Footwear (CEF) 
prototypeswe examine, demonstrates that gesamtkunstwerk provides a 
method to explore thepossible roles that the feet can have in society. 
We use fashionable costume design, pop music, dance choreography, 
visualization, scenography, kinesiology and 3D fabrication practices. 
 Resulting in a unified body of work, gesamtkunstwerk shows that shoes 
and feet are more than simply tools to help carry our bodies around. 
They can be reimagined through the act of performance and the 
application of audiovisual technology to make a statement, semantically 
communicate social-political concerns and facilitate free, spontaneous 
expression. Explorations of different founded concepts of the feet and 
footwear as activists, as citizens and liberators illustrate the vast 
potentials for the feet for social change.
Alexandra Murray-Leslie
 is an artistic researcher, performer, poly-artist and co-founder of the
 international art collective Chicks on Speed. Her current artistic 
research & practice explores designing, fabricating & performing
 computer enhanced footwear for a new theatrical, audiovisual 
expressivity of the feet. Alex’s work has been discussed in publications
 such as Creating Artscience collaboration (Schnugg, 2019), Explorations
 in Art & Technology (Candy & Edmonds, 2018), Akward Politics 
(Smith Prei & Stehle 2017) as well as periodicals such as New Yorker
 (2006), The Wire (2015), Art Forum (2013), Financial Times (2013) &
 New York Times (2002). Her work has been shown in major biennales, 
festivals and art institutes such as; Ars Electronica, ZKM Centre for 
Art and Media, 56th & 57 Venice Biennale, MoMA NY, Centre Pompidou, 
Museum of Modern Art Australia, Turner Prize Tate Britian, ArtScience 
Gallery Dublin & Singapore.
Sophia Efstathiouis is a Postdoctoral
 Fellow in Applied Ethics in the Department of Philosophy and Religious 
Studies at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). 
Sophia’s work develops philosophy and art-based approaches to 
responsible innovation, informed by her embedded humanistic research 
within scientific projects. Sophia has published on seaweed, systems 
biology and the use of everyday ideas in science as found science by 
analogy to found art. She has contributed with performance lectures in 
the Athens Biennale (2013, 2017).She is a Council member of the 
International Society for History, Philosophy and Social Studies of 
Biology (ISHPSSB).
Tina Frank is an Austrian designer, artist, and
 professor at the University of Art and Design, Linz where she is 
heading the Department Visual Communication at the Institute for Media. 
Since 1995 she has established three design companies, working for a 
wide range of clients creating websites, signage systems and album 
covers. As an artist, Tina Frank collaborates with musicians and creates
 audio-visual performances shown live all around the world, such as Ars 
Electronica, Linz; Centre Pompidou, Paris; ICC, Tokyo, etc. She received
 the Diagonale Prize for Innovative Cinema. Her current focus in 
teaching is on digital publications, data visualisations and 
synaesthetic experimentation.
Yamu Wang : A Reader’s Response to A Thousand Plateaus’ Introduction to Rhizome - & ICH & I & CH &In
 this presentation, I would like to first shortly introduce my name and 
Maya, Mayu, Muya, Muyu, Yama, Yamu, Yuma, Yumu, an art work which was 
drawn from auto corrections of my name, either by a word processor or in
 people’s memory, as its combination of vowels and consonants seems 
rather unfamiliar to the alphabet system.
Then, the presentation will
 be followed by a reading of A Reader’s Response to A Thousand Plateaus’
 Introduction to Rhizome, which shares my personal relation to the 
Rhizome text, as suggested in the title, and I believe, it is in itself a
 rhizomatic text.
& ICH & I & CH & was inspired by 
Deleuze and Guattari’s idea of “and.” “Ich” is the first-person singular
 pronoun in German, equivalent to English “I.” “CH” is the abbreviation 
of Latin “Confoederatio Helvetica,” meaning “Swiss Confederation,” the 
official name of Switzerland. As someone who mainly communicates in 
English, the experience of living in German-speaking Switzerland allows 
me to fuse the German “I” with an English component. Meanwhile, it also 
deals with my artistic subjectivity, which makes it possible to 
articulate the “I” in an exhibition context, is dependent on the 
institutional framework and support.
Yamu Wang has a particular 
interest, or sensitivity, in examining and exploring subjectivity and 
how it is conditioned by using her personal experiences as case studies.
 She works with installation, video, text, and performance; she also 
creates discursive situations where different social bodies can meet and
 talk. Language is a recurrent element in her works, may it be the 
subject matter, medium, and/or material in part because it conditions 
her very being. She considers herself a subject-in-process, both inside 
and outside the art field. The production process, as well as the 
condition, are often revealed thus in her works. She often wishes to 
employ the presence of the audience’s body in a certain way, and that 
constitutes an integral part of her work. A bigger concern for her is 
what the work does, in contrast to how they look, even though she is 
fully aware that their looks determine what they could possibly achieve.
Jaspal Birdi : Being connected is less costly than being engagedBeing connected is less costly than being engaged— Zygmunt Bauman
Technological
 innovations simultaneously create better understandings of our 
surroundings while impairing the distinction between illusion and 
reality. With social interactions increasingly lived through a screen 
visually crisp and informative as real-time and space; as history 
progresses, the ratio of implicit knowledge on the 
evolution/flaws/limits of technology decreases.
As a Visual Artist, I
 perform a painting process which seeks to eliminate the difference 
between a window and screen though glitches. Often playing with paint’s 
loose, chromatic, and photo realistic qualities versus rigid and 
realistic impressions of thinly collaged digital photography, my works 
reveal similarities and contrasts between the real and abstract: 
questioning the physicality of our realities—the value of time as it 
shapes our understanding of the space we live.
My research often 
begins visually, utilizing a ludic process I found with technology to 
draw attention to the machine extension of human hands as it reaches its
 breaking point and seems to imitate human ensitivity. Parallel to 
visual practice, I read works by philosophers to draw my attention to 
patterns within my documentation and experimentation which I feel are 
reflective of present day phenomena. In the occasion of the 2019 TVAD 
International Symposium, I would be eager for the opportunity to share 
how my visual research draws clarity from philosophy, most recently in 
particular, Zygmunt Bauman’s book Liquid Love
Jaspal Birdi is a 
multi-disciplinary artist inspired by dynamic environments she 
experiences in reality and virtually. Often mixing with photography with
 painting, Jaspal Birdi’s works question the physicality of our 
realities — the value of time as it shapes our understanding of the 
space we live. Holding a Bachelors of Fine Arts: Drawing & Painting 
from OCAD University, a Masters in Arts Management from Istituto Europeo
 di Design (IED), and a Specialization in Curating Contemporary Art from
 Venice School of Curatorial Studies, Jaspal Birdi has participated in 
solo and group exhibitions in Canada, Italy and Germany. Recipient of 
awards and honours such as the Arte Laguna Prize, Premio Stonefly, and 
Premio Francesco Fabbri, her works have been featured in publications 
such as Artribune, Exibart, Zoomers Magazine Canada, Corriere Della 
Sera, IO Donna, Repubblica, and BOOOOOM. Currently based in Milan, 
Italy, Jaspal Birdi is an artist in residence at ViaFarini
Maria
 Patricia Tinajero : When Dirt Becomes Soil: Ecological Art Practices as
 a New Philosophy of Praxis in Age of the AnthropoceneThe 
1970’s is a benchmark for when changes in our own ways of interacting 
with the planet could have made substantial difference nonetheless it 
seems that the environmental movement lost its opportunity. Is it too 
late today? This study does not provide a solution for the global 
environmental crisis. Rather, it is a point of reference to begin to 
imagine alternative philosophical frameworks to answer the trauma of the
 planet’s material substrates.
Ecological art practitioners are the 
stewards for aesthetic reclamation, remediation, and conservation of 
soil, and their goal is to develop ethical-aesthetic perspectives that 
engage art and environment through concepts, language, praxis, and 
theory to uncover the underpinnings and attributes that take place in 
soil. Through these embodied ethical-aesthetic perspectives ecological 
art practices are situated at the cracks left by the international 
environmental movement. I argue that redistribution is a material 
philosophical system, and that fermentation is its method for thinking, 
for acting, and for transforming soil’s material properties and, to 
access the potentiality for philosophical endeavours with soil. 
Fermentation and redistribution follow two axis, interconnectivity and 
urgency, contributing with new definitions and procedures to address the
 problem of soil’s sustainability. The analytic focus of redistribution 
through the process of fermentation activates emergent contributions to 
the fields of art, aesthetics and ethics by triggering the manifold 
processes of soil’s reclamation and remediation as part of a larger 
metabolic exchange and ecological thinking
Maria Patricia Tinajero
 is a visual artist and a PHD candidate at the Institute for Doctoral 
Studies in Visual Art Philosophy in Portland, Maine. Her academic and 
creative research focuses on social justice and the 
environment.Currently, Tinajero is researching ecological art practices 
and soil at the intersections of art, biology and philosophy. Tinajero 
is coauthor in several publications in the field of ecological sound 
composition and ecological art practices, including her most recent 
essay, “Ethical Grounds: The Aesthetic Action of Soil,” published in the
 anthology Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene, edited by Julie
 Reiss, at Vernon Press. Tinajero received an affiliate fellowship from 
the American Academy in Rome for “Aqua Circular” (2010). In fall 2018, 
Tinajero was part of the exhibition “Making Migration Visible” at the 
Institute of Contemporary Art at the Maine College of Art in Portland.
Sebastian Mühl: On aesthetic indeterminacyEver
 since artists in the 1960s (e.g. Marcel Broodthaers) started to use 
strategies of imitation, adaptation and fictionalization to adopt 
scientific protocols and their modes of visualization, science and 
philosophy themselves have become a matter of reflection, transformation
 and critique through contemporary art. But according an epistemological
 status to contemporary artistic knowledge production means to challenge
 the differences between art, philosophy and science. Artistic 
production reaches a point of indeterminancy when it mimetically tries 
to imitate the epistemological claims of philosophy and science. There 
should rather be an acknowledgement of the distinction between the 
theoretical, practical and aesthetic forms of experience and 
rationality. The determination of art is constituted by an aesthetic 
logic, differentiating art from non-aesthetic phenomena. Thus aesthetic 
experience does not relate directly to propositional understanding which
 is fundamental to scientific knowledge and philosophical argument. It 
rather breaks free with the determinations of theoretical experience and
 leaves thinking open to an infinite process of indeterminacy. Even 
though in the light of the recent rise of artistic research production 
in contemporary art as well as aesthetic epistemologies in contemporary 
philosophy, there remains a fundamental break between what we could call
 the „truth procedures“ (Badiou) of art, science and philosophy. An 
aesthetic experience of art thus undermines the clarity of any 
epistemological content potentially present in artworks. Where 
indeterminacy can be identified in the experience of art, it points 
towards the core of what an aesthetic experience ultimately means — 
namely the structural potentiality and negativity that challenges our 
determining (theoretical and philosophical) judgments. By discussing 
some recent examples of artistic research (e.g. the work of German 
artist Emanuel Mathias), my paper will try to clarify this argument by 
drawing on some theoretical assumptions of authors such as Alain Badiou,
 Christoph Menke and Martin Seel.
Dr. des. Sebastian Mühl is an 
artist and researcher based in Berlin and Klagenfurt, Austria. His 
research focuses on the political dimensions of contemporary practices 
and on the politico-aesthetic implications of artistic perceptions of 
modernity. He finished a phd thesis on the revival of utopian thought in
 contemporary art. The project was a critical research into 
modernological, participatory and art activist strategies in the visual 
arts since the early 1990s. His films and film-based visual art projects
 focus on the effects of the politico-aesthetic utopias of modernity. 
Sebastian is currently preparing a postdoc research project on „crisis 
as form“ in digital environments. Further research interests: Critical 
Theory, Aesthetics, Theories of Democracy, Artistic Research and 
Aesthetic Epistemologies.
Mimi Cabell : I'll work out tomorrow 
 I’ll Workout Tomorrow is a 33-minute video that uses as material 80 
pairs of underwear, all size XS, from the Victoria’s Secret ‘Pink’ line —
 a junior line marketed to college age women. Additionally, I only 
purchased underwear on which language appears — phrases like “Hey Hey,” 
“I Want Everything And More,” “Unwrap Me,” “No Peeking,” “Wish You Were 
Here,” or “Cheers,” to name a few. I then interviewed multiple people 
and recorded their reactions as they sifted through the underwear. The 
video is comprised of selections from these interviews. For “Artists and
 the Philosophers we Love” I will screen a 10-15 minute excerpt of this 
video along with a brief presentation about the process of making the 
piece and the ideas that drove its production.
Without drawing 
conclusions, Workout is reflective and dialogical; it engages ideas of 
desire and performance, gender, sexuality, and capitalism’s co-option of
 cultural and political movements, and would work well in the context of
 other work in gender and queer studies, performance studies, and 
investigations into the influences of markets on cultural practices. The
 video is an ethnography, and the content points to work done by 
theorists like Angela Davis, Sara Ahmed, and Judith Butler. Ultimately, 
Workout represents an investigation into how one is both produced by a 
culture, at the same time as producing, co-producing, or re-producing 
that same culture