From Dust to Dusts
(2025)
author(s): Hudec Adam
published in: Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
From Dust to Dusts is a richly illustrated exploration of air’s hidden materiality and the plural worlds of dust. Drawing from the interdisciplinary practice of the Vienna based Dusts Institute, the book reveals dusts as more than residue: they are carriers of histories, markers of transformation, and agents of connection across geographies, species, and time.
Blending artistic research, environmental science, architecture, and public engagement, the publication traces projects such as the Dusts Catcher Kit, Dusts-Free Chamber, Biopatina Workshop, and the large-scale Airsight Deck installation. These interventions make the invisible visible while capturing airborne particles, revealing microbial ecologies on building façades, and transforming air into a perceptible, participatory medium.
Essays and visual documentation unpack the Institute’s concept of “dustsing”: a methodology of sensing, collecting, and activating dusts to challenge assumptions about cleanliness, permanence, and environmental stewardship. Moving from microscopic particulate matter to planetary airflows, the book examines dusts as both pollutants and ecological contributors, revealing their role in climate systems, biodiversity, and urban atmospheres.
A call for attunement and care, From Dust to Dusts invites readers to rethink air not as empty space but as a shared, contested, and dynamic commons, one that is continuously inscribed by the smallest particles we live among.
Grain: Mediator Between East and West
(2025)
author(s): Kateryna Tykhonenko
published in: Research Catalogue
"Grain: Mediator Between East and West" is an image-led, cross-temporal exploration of bread wheat as both a commodity and a metaphor. Drawing on its historical and practical ubiquity as a staple grain in agrarian (Eastern) Europe, wheat emerges as the focal medium through which cultural and geopolitical narratives are revealed. What narratives does bread wheat carry, and what is entangled within localised perspectives? To what extent does the cultural history of grain intersect with modern grain infrastructures, whereby wheat transforms from an elemental medium into a mediator between East and West? Through thinking with and about grain, this work interrogates the gaps, overlaps and resonances between East and West, the post-war Soviet 1940s and the present day, repositioning wheat as a cultural mediator.
This Master's project was conducted within the European Media Studies program at the University of Potsdam and University of Applied Sciences Potsdam, August 2025.
The dramaturgy of Conversation
(2025)
author(s): ingrid cogne
connected to: Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
published in: Research Catalogue
The dramaturgy of Conversation aims to tackle different approaches, analyses, and practices of conversations. Several forms of conversations and various related knowledges are questioned from different positions and perspectives. The data studied come from personal, external, or created (for and within the project) archives. In this project, researcher Ingrid Cogne analyses, develops or transforms, re-articulates and re-structures the ways in which one creates, inhabits, and facilitates conversations.
The central question of The dramaturgy of Conversation as a methodology is HOW: How can the context, structure, location, and duration of existing or created situations of conversation support the (re-)articulation of the persons involved? How can one use or work with conversations? How can one read, inhabit, and embody the parameters of a conversation? How can one facilitate a conversation? How does a situation itself facilitate the meeting with knowledge? How can one create a situation of conversation that will be the facilitator itself?
The dramaturgy of Conversation proposes situations, settings, and protocols of conversations that involve, combine, or isolate various languages (spoken, bodily, and written), “in-between” and relational knowledge, and dialogical methods and processes as well as formats of communication.
The dramaturgy of Conversation is a methodology that focuses on “how” practical knowledge can be read, unfolded, and circulated within the “doing”. It is a research project that facilitates the access to the unknown and the inarticulable – navigating between quantity and quality, fiction and reality, material and immaterial, visible and invisible.
This research is aproached by the author as the context wherein a self-reflective process can be (re-)articulated and CO- and reciprocal activations of hardly articulable knowledges can be performed. With this re/search, Cogne insists on the need of “conversation” to be practiced and considered as knowledge.
Duration: 15.1.2019 – 14.1.2025
Project leader: Ingrid Cogne (IKW)
Funded by: FWF - Austrian Science Fund | Elise-Richter PEEK (V709)
Institution: IKW, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Austria
It’s Natural (and Other Frictions)
(2025)
author(s): Cecilia Carvalhal Braga de Andrade
published in: Research Catalogue
This exposition explores how performance-based artistic research can expose the constructedness of gender identity by placing the body in tension with resistant materials and wearable prosthetics. Working with spray foam insulation as both sculptural surface and choreographic partner, I investigated how its artificiality, rigidity, and eventual fracture could function as metaphors for the instability of normative embodiment. What began as a struggle to inhabit a rigid foam body evolved into experiments with prosthetic extensions, where the material was reimagined as a collaborator that displaced gestures, layered images, and generated hybrid presences. Drawing on Judith Butler’s theory of performativity, drag performance practices, Hélio Oiticica’s parangolés, and Rebecca Horn’s prosthetic sculptures, the research stages a dialogue between body, material, and viewer. Documentation through video and photography further expanded the work, creating layered choreographies where prosthetics multiplied into digital traces. In this process, the foam bodies became what Lauren Elkin calls “art monsters”: excessive, disruptive forms that refuse coherence, insisting instead on incompleteness, transformation, and the possibility of imagining bodies otherwise.
Splickshh
(2025)
author(s): Luca Carlevarino
published in: Research Catalogue
Splickshh è un innaffiatoio per tastiere. Una provocazione tangibile, un prodotto speculativo che mette in discussione il ruolo stesso della tecnologia.
Ci invita a ripensare la tastiera non più come interfaccia di scrittura ma come spazio botanico, in ottica di un'economia più circolare.
Home page JSS
(2025)
author(s): Journal of Sonic Studies
published in: Journal of Sonic Studies
Home page of the Journal of Sonic Studies