A.I.R.: From Radical Individuality to Connected Subjectivity

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Elisa Cuesta Fernández, María Victoria De la Torre Luque, Pedro Arnanz Coll
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Humans are part of an interlinked world crossed by overlapping flows: substances, beings and information. The major global events that have unfolded throughout 2020 have profoundly altered the social system, revealing deep structural weak spots, and pushed its resilience to the limit, nearly causing its suffocation. This context has called into question our anthropocentric mindset and has led us to critically revise how we think about the (eco)systems we are part of, how we act within them, what is our agency to drive meaningful shifts, and with which tools we can do so. For nine months during which life and art became part of a single space, we, three artists and designers in collaboration with a diverse team of researchers, explored the way in which our individual and collective agency is affected by how close – both emotionally and physically – we feel to others, whether human or not. By navigating through art and design approaches, we imagined perspectives to defy our dualist, linear and Cartesian point of view to question how, as our system regains its speed, we can move towards a more connected sense of being. A systemic thinking toolkit, dozens of conversations, a breathing body, a poem and a visual essay have unfolded during this time, giving shape to the project A.I.R. Air[noun, uncountable], the mixture of gases we breathe; air[noun, uncountable], the space that circulates everything; but also A.I.R., an acronym for “artists in residency”, or more accurately, artists in remoteness. Air that we have lacked too often during these nine months. Air that can be the deepest kind of embrace, in these times pierced by radical forms of isolation. We start weaving our ideas around the notions of systems, agency and closeness by asking: how close do you feel?
a.i.r.:从激进的个体性到关联的主体性
人类是一个相互关联的世界的一部分,这个世界被重叠的流动所交叉:物质、生命和信息。2020年发生的重大全球事件深刻改变了社会制度,暴露出深层次的结构性弱点,并将其恢复能力推向极限,几乎导致其窒息。这种背景对我们人类中心主义的思维模式提出了质疑,并引导我们批判性地修改我们对我们所处的(生态)系统的看法,我们如何在其中行动,我们推动有意义的转变的机构是什么,以及我们可以使用哪些工具来实现这一转变。在九个月的时间里,生活和艺术成为了一个空间的一部分,我们,三位艺术家和设计师,与一个不同的研究团队合作,探索了我们个人和集体的代理是如何受到我们与他人的亲密程度的影响的,无论是情感上还是身体上。通过艺术和设计方法,我们想象了一些视角来挑战我们的二元论、线性和笛卡尔的观点,并质疑当我们的系统恢复速度时,我们如何才能走向更紧密的存在感。在这段时间里,一个系统的思考工具包、几十个对话、一个呼吸的身体、一首诗和一篇视觉文章展开了,为A.I.R.项目提供了轮廓。空气[名词,不可数],我们呼吸的气体的混合物;空气[名词,不可数],使万物流通的空间;还有A.I.R,这是“驻地艺术家”的缩写,或者更准确地说,是“偏远地区的艺术家”。这九个月来我们经常缺少的空气。空气可以是最深沉的拥抱,在这个时代被激进的隔离形式所穿透。我们开始围绕系统、代理和亲密的概念编织我们的想法,通过问:你感觉有多亲密?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
审稿时长
30 weeks
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