Climate Disaster Preparedness

Reimagining Extreme Events through Art and Technology
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Springer

Paru le : 2024-05-02

As a result of global warming, extreme events, such as firestorms and flash floods, pose increasingly unpredictable and uncertain existential threats, taking lives, destroying communities, and wreaking havoc on habitats. Current aesthetic, technological and scientific frameworks struggle to imagine,...
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Éditeur

Collection
n.c

Parution
2024-05-02

Pages
219 pages

EAN papier
9783031561139

Dennis Del Favero is an artist, Australian Laureate Fellow and Chair Professor of Digital Innovation and Executive Director of The University of New South Wales (UNSW)’s iCinema Centre for Interactive Cinema Research (iCinema). He has led numerous large-scale interdisciplinary art projects that explore the visceral dynamics of unpredictable climate scenarios and the aesthetics of uncertainty using AI visualisation systems. He is a Visiting Professor at the University of Melbourne and Visiting Professorial Fellow at the University of Münster, Germany; Editorial Board Member of Quodlibet Studio Corpi, Italy; and former Executive Director of the Australian Research Council | Humanities & Creative Arts. He is represented by Galerie Brigitte Schenk, Cologne and Mais Wright, Sydney.Susanne Thurow is a Deputy Director and Director of Research Development as well as an ARC Laureate Postdoctoral Fellow at UNSW’s iCinema Centre, where she leads the climate aestheticsresearch program. Her interdisciplinary work rethinks contemporary arts through performative digital aesthetics, having co-developed multidisciplinary projects with industry partners, such as Opera Australia. She has published widely, spanning theatre, performance and digital media studies. Her latest book (Routledge, 2020) won the 2021 Alvie Egan Award and the 2019 UNSW Art & Design Dean’s Award for Research Excellence, Best Monograph. In the past, she worked for Thalia Theater (Germany), Big hART (Australia) and German cultural association Goethe-Institut. Michael J. Ostwald is a Professor of architectural analytics at The University of New South Wales (UNSW). He was previously an EU Distinguished Professor, Dean of the Built Environment at the University of Newcastle, Professorial Fellow at Victoria University Wellington and Adjunct Professor at RMIT. He completed postdoctoral research on applications of spatial computing in architecture at UCLA(Calif.), CCA (McGill, Montreal) and Harvard (Mass.). He is the author of 17 books and over 160 journal articles. Michael is Editor-in-Chief of the Nexus Network Journal: Architecture and Mathematics (Springer) and a member of the editorial boards of ARQ (Cambridge) and Architectural Theory Review (Taylor and Francis).Ursula Frohne is Professor for art history at the University of Münster (Germany). Previously, she was Professor of twentieth and twenty-first-century art history at the University of Cologne, Chief Curator for ZKM Center for Art & Media in Karlsruhe and Lecturer at Karlsruhe’s State Academy of Fine Art. In Cologne, she chaired the DFG-project Cinematographic Aesthetics in Contemporary Art (2007–14), while from 2023 she has been co-leading the DFG-Research Group on Access to Cultural Goods in Digital Transformation. She was awarded the University of Cologne’s Leo Spitzer Prize for Excellence in Research. She has published widely on contemporary art practice and technological creative media.

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