Julian Stadon Workshop: ‘TeleAgriCulture’
October 29, 2022
In this workshop lead by artist-researcher Julian Stadon, participants will explore urban environmental sampling and the TeleAgriCulture platform, gaining an understanding of digital sensor systems, sampling methods, and creative applications, and working in teams to develop and present project concepts utilizing the platform.
In this workshop lead by artist-researcher Julian Stadon, participants will explore urban environmental sampling and the TeleAgriCulture platform, gaining an understanding of digital sensor systems, sampling methods, and creative applications, and working in teams to develop and present project concepts utilizing the platform.
In this workshop, participants will engage in urban environmental
sampling (water, soil, air etc.) and will be introduced to the
TeleAgriCulture platform. Based on previous and novel projects, as well
as case studies that aim to engage creatives, farmers, cooks, and the
general public in food, urban, and post-industrial ecologies, the
workshop will offer an overview of how the digital sensor systems
operate and are modified, along with other peripheral sampling methods.
Participants will be introduced to the system technics and its data
flows, from sensor/sample to server, to creative outputs, along with
being introduced to an ideation and rapid-prototyping method for using
the platform. Participants will then break into transdisciplinary teams
and, using available samples, develop a project concept that uses the
platform, with the results to be presented at the end of the session.
Presented by the Concordia University Research Chair in Critical Practices in Materials and Materiality with Hexagram Network, and happening at the Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture & Technology, on Saturday 22nd from 10:00am to 5:00pm in the Speculative Life Research Cluster room (Room EV-10.625) @ Concordia University, 1515 Ste-Catherine Street West, H3G 2W1.
Julian Stadon’s practice-based research intersects biocomputational processes, embodiment, and food ecologies toward performative art-science interventions. His PhD examines Post-Bio-Digital Identity and Augmentation Aesthetics through the Data Body Trader project and marart.org. Stadon currently teaches at Interface Cultures (Linz), Winchester and LUCA Schools of Art, directs TeleAgriCulture and The Island of the Day Before Projects and is on the steering committees for the IEEE International Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality (ISMAR), 3erH0F and Donautics.
Julian Stadon’s practice-based research intersects biocomputational processes, embodiment, and food ecologies toward performative art-science interventions. His PhD examines Post-Bio-Digital Identity and Augmentation Aesthetics through the Data Body Trader project and marart.org. Stadon currently teaches at Interface Cultures (Linz), Winchester and LUCA Schools of Art, directs TeleAgriCulture and The Island of the Day Before Projects and is on the steering committees for the IEEE International Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality (ISMAR), 3erH0F and Donautics.