KIBLIX 2022 Pre-events / Reading Group: A Repair Manual for Spaceship Earth - Museum of Failure KIBLIX 2022 Pre-events / Reading Group: A Repair Manual for Spaceship Earth 11 April–13 June 2022 (10 meetings), at 5:30 p.m. MMC KIBLA
As part of our non-formal education program, we are pleased to announce a reading group entitled A Repair Manual for Spaceship Earth. The series of ten meetings will be moderated by art historians and curators Irena Borić and Živa Kleindienst. We will meet weekly from the beginning of April to the beginning of June. The reading group is designed as an open space for meetings, dialogue, conversation and collaborative learning about ecological, socio-political and activist topics, which will be drawn from KIBLA's intermedia productions and the visual exhibition program. The aim of the shared reading of selected texts and collective reflection is to get to know a wide range of artworks and to exchange knowledge on current theories of contemporaneity, the development of technology and the social, political and economic concepts that dictate global shifts and thus condition our everyday lives.
The meetings will be held weekly on Mondays (except for holidays in April and May when the meetings will be moved to Tuesdays) from 11 April to 13 June 2022 at MMC KIBLA (Ulica kneza Koclja 9). The reading group is aimed at a wider, general audience; no professional background is expected, except curiosity, a desire for collaborative learning and sharing of knowledge. We kindly recommend that you read the proposed texts in advance. To register your participation and receive the texts in PDF format, please send an e-mail to irena.boric@kibla.org. Registration is for information only and is not binding.
You are cordially invited!
10. Museum of Failure Monday, 13 June, at 5:30 p.m.
In this final meeting, we will read another chapter from the book Digital Rubbish. A natural history of Electronics. We will focus on the chapter Museum of Failure. The Mutability of Electronic Memory (pp. 101–25) and discuss what happens to obsolete equipment and technology. In what ways does it fall out of the stream of continuous progress? The author is interested in how obsolete technology, instead of representing historical progress, speaks about the materiality and imagination of this technology.
< Visuals: P L A T EA U R E S I D U E, Terra Ignota, 2021, screen capture. Courtesy of the artists.
__ The reading group is part of informal educational program, supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia and the Municipality of Maribor.
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