Urban Sensing
Gabrys, Jennifer; Pritchard, Helen and Houston, Lara. 2017. Urban Sensing. In: "Citizen Sense (Jennifer Gabrys, Helen Pritchard and Lara Houston). "Urban Sensing". As part of the exhibition and events for "The New Observatory", organised by Sam Skinner and Hannah Redler (ODI), (2017)", FACT, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 22 June - 1 October 2017. [Show/Exhibition]
Item Type: |
Show/Exhibition |
Creators: | Gabrys, Jennifer; Pritchard, Helen and Houston, Lara |
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Abstract or Description: | Sensors are a vital part of environmental monitoring within scientific Frackbox was designed to be covertly placed at the intersections The Dustboxes are a series of low-tech air pollution data collectors, The New Observatory transforms FACT in Liverpool into an observatory for the 21st century, bringing together an international group of artists exploring new and alternative modes of measuring, predicting, and sensing the world. |
Additional Information: | Artists: Burak Arikan, Wafaa Bilal, Natasha Caruana, James Coupe, Phil Coy, Citizen Sense, Julie Freeman, David Gauthier, Interaction Research Studio, Rachel Jacobs, Jackie Karuti, Kei Kreutler and Libre Space Foundation, Liz Orton, Proboscis (Giles Lane and Stefan Kueppers), Evan Roth, Stanza, Thomson & Craighead, Jeronimo Voss with Radamés Ajna, Yu-Chen Wang Curated by Hannah Redler Hawes (ODI) and Sam Skinner (FACT and Manchester Metropolitan University) The New Observatory transforms FACT in Liverpool into an observatory for the 21st century, bringing together an international group of artists exploring new and alternative modes of measuring, predicting, and sensing the world. Humans have always used tools to observe, but now technology alters our perceptions more than ever. Today we are all connected to ever-growing systems of data. Corporations, governments, machines and individuals are constantly tracking and interpreting the smallest details of our lives. Artists in The New Observatory create instruments, or use data, to measure the world differently. They conjure new and untold stories, from the personal to the political, micro to macro. They collectively challenge assumptions and standardisation, investigating the moments when logic fails and how that failure might create new possibilities. Artworks reflect upon how powerful observational tools, once the preserve of scientists, are now part of everyday life. Liverpool has its own unique history of observation. The Liverpool and Bidston Observatories, active from 1845 and 1867, monitored natural phenomena from the stars to the tides, and created their own bespoke scientific instruments. The exhibition engages with this history and spirit, reimagining what an observatory, and observation, can be. The exhibition includes interactive works, installations, sound, film, photography, critical design projects, drawing and mixed media. Many of them are the result of unusual data gathering expeditions. The exhibition suggests we are becoming “observatories of ourselves” and considers the roles of analysis, understanding, and imagination in this process. The New Observatory stands as an open call for everyone to become actively involved in responding to our complex, contemporary relationship with data. It offers a space to reassess our roles as active citizens within a “surveillance” culture, and to forge more critical, creative relationships with the data landscapes we inhabit. The New Observatory is co-produced by FACT and the Open Data Institute. Exhibition design: Ab Rogers Design Statutory funders: Arts Council England / Liverpool City Council Exhibition funders, supporters and partners: Manchester Metropolitan University / Canada Council for the Arts / DXARTS (University of Washington) / Institut for Auslandsbeziehungen / Ministry of Culture (Taiwan) / COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) / The North West Consortium Doctoral Training Partnership / Datawell BC / Liverpool Arab Arts Festival / METAL Exhibition sponsors: Forbo Flooring Systems / American Hardwood Export Council / Jayhawk Works commissioned by the Open Data Institute as part of the Data as Culture programme were supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England. FACT presents The New Observatory |
Keywords: | Sensors, Environmental monitoring |
Departments, Centres and Research Units: | Computing Sociology |
Date range: | 22 June - 1 October 2017 |
Related URL: | http://samskinner.net/the-new-observatory, https://theodi.org/article/the-new-observatory-a-creative-collaboration-between-fact-and-the-odi/ |
Event Location: | FACT, Liverpool, United Kingdom |
Item ID: | 25099 |
Date Deposited: | 22 Nov 2018 09:19 |
Last Modified: | 29 Apr 2020 17:00 |
URI: |
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