Part of: For Ever More Images?
Talks & Thoughts

School of Images: Α workshop with James Bridle

For Ever More Images?

Dates

Prices

Free

Location

Athens

Time & Date

Day
Time
Venue
Day
Wednesday
Time
Info will be given to the invited participants
Venue

Information

Participation

The participants will be invited by the workshop coordinator.
The outcomes of the workshop will be presented as part of the program.

The role of images and other art forms in Greece and around the Mediterranean.

The role of images

In the context of "For Ever More Images?" James Bridle will be leading a workshop with artists, technologists, and environmental activists to explore the role of images and other art forms in the way we see and appreciate the changes occurring to our entangled ecosystems and political systems, in Greece and around the Mediterranean.

© James Bridle

"Seamleass Transitions"

James Bridle

James Bridle is an artist and writer working across technologies and disciplines. His artworks and installations have been exhibited in Europe, North and South America, Asia and Australia, and have been viewed by hundreds of thousands of visitors online. He has been commissioned by organisations including the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Barbican, Artangel, the Oslo Architecture Triennale, the Istanbul Design Biennial, and been honoured by Ars Electronica, the Japan Media Arts Festival, and the Design Museum, London. His writing on literature, culture and networks has appeared in magazines and newspapers including Frieze, Wired, Domus, Cabinet, the Atlantic, the New Statesman, and many others, in print and online, and he has written a regular column for the Observer. "New Dark Age", his book about technology, knowledge, and the end of the future,was published by Verso (UK & US) in 2018. He lectures regularly on radio, at conferences, universities, and other events, including SXSW, Lift, the Global Art Forum, Re:Publica and TED. He was been a resident at Lighthouse, Brighton, the White Building, London, and Eyebeam, New York, and an Adjunct Professor on the Interactive Telecommunications Programme at New York University. His work can be found at http://jamesbridle.com.