Video documentation

A selection of lectures and presentations from Konstfack Research Week 1-5 February 2016.

Monday 1 February

Welcome and introduction to Konstfack Research Week, by Maria Lantz

 

Introduction and programme overview, by Magnus Ericson and moderator Ulla Lind

 

Konstfack Research Strategy, presentation by Magnus Mörck

 

Art? Were More Interested in Plumbing, lecture by Maria Hellström Reimer

 

Two approaches to artistic research, lecture by Magnus Bärtås

 

Programme perspectives, presentations with Ulrika Karlsson, Bo Westerlund, Anette Göthlund & Annika Hellman

Ulrika Karlsson

 

Bo Westerlund

 

Anette Göthlund & Annika Hellman

 

The Arrested Time: Figurations of Otherness, lecture by Mara Lee

 


Tuesday 2 February

Introduction and programme overview, by moderator Håkan Nilsson

 

Making a field. Aspects of research in art, technology and design, an introduction to the Konstfack and KTH Royal Institute of Technologys joint doctoral programme Art, Technology and Design, by Catharina Gabrielsson

 

The Ghosts of Globalization and their (In)Ability to Haunt, lecture by Esther Peeren, introduction by Luis Berríos-Negrón

Luis Berríos-Negrón

 

Esther Peeren

 

Discussing the spectre, and the metaphor, conversation between Esther Peeren, Ectoplasmic Materialism and Luis Berríos-Negrón

 

Forms of participation, presentation by Maja Frögård

 

Art, Pedagogics, and Theory: The What, Why, and How of Things, lecture by Irina Sandomirskaja, introduction by Behzad Khosravi Noori

 


Wednesday 3 February

The politics of the camera, presentation by Petra Bauer

 

From rhizomatic lingo to investigations of the mundane and everydayish: some aspects of the word "practical", presentation by Katji Lindberg

 

HAPTICA The role haptics plays in the aesthetic gestalt process for the culinary arts, presentation by Cheryl Akner-Koler

 

Microhistories, presentation by Magnus Bärtås and Andrej Slávik

 

Mapping the Intangible – Adaptivity in Architectural Design, presentation by Cameline Bolbroe

 

Algorithms explained for artists and other normal people, lecture by Bart Haensel