FACE NO DIAL OF A CLOCK. Investigating asynchronous experiences of present times by means of art
(2025)
author(s): Laura von Niederhäusern
published in: Research Catalogue
The subjective experience of time pressure in today’s efficiency- and performance-oriented society is fuelled by a paradox: acceleration is omnipresent due to economic and technological demands, while at the same time complexity and self-responsibility require more time for decisions.
This exposition examines individual and institutional ways of dealing with discrepant time demands. Where and how do different age groups experience divergent time regimes that occur simultaneously? Which techniques do individuals and institutions use or invent to synchronize different time perceptions, rhythms, and activities? How can artistic research create asynchronicity and make it experienceable through filmic means? And, finally, to what extent can filmic thinking produce ways of knowing that convey (as yet) unverbalized perceptions of time?
Methodologically, this research combines analytical and artistic approaches in an essayistic procedure comprising cinematic practice and writing. On the one hand, it explores different aspects of divergent perceptions of time in a series of case studies under the leitmotif of “asynchronous determinations of time.” Situated in both immaterial and care work, in which bodily and affective temporalities are highly important, these empirical investigations consider the role of lifetime (age, biography, memory) and temporal modes (tempos; imperatives, indicatives, subjunctives). On the other hand, this study develops specific artistic procedures for focusing perception by means of narration, fragmentation, montage, visual and linguistic interventions, extractions and interweavings. Since simultaneous non-simultaneities (tend to) overwhelm subjective experience, the procedures adopted in this research contribute to new forms of filmic thinking and images of thought. They should be understood as an incentive to empathize with different understandings of time.
Diffracting the Copenhagen Interpretation
(last edited: 2024)
author(s): Søren Kjærgaard, Amilcar Lucien Packer Yessouroun, Carla Zaccagnini
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
This KUV project intends to investigate, through theory and practical experiments, the possible implications that concepts such as spacetime, entanglement, uncertainty, non-locality, and diffraction, proposed by quantum physics, have on artistic practice and narratives.
As a collaboration among artists from different fields and different Educational Institutions, the research will nourish from this encounter as well as from the interaction with students and the contributions of specialists.