Driving the Human exhibition at ZKM, first part

© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Non-Human Perspectives: Sharing, Shaping, Sensing Habitats

 

With Human Bacteria Interfaces and Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North
June 17 to July 30, 2023

The exhibition Driving the Human – Seven Prototypes for Eco-Social Renewal runs from June 17 to November 26, 2023, at ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Presented in three parts, the exhibition shows the seven prototypes for sustainable coexistence that were developed within the framework of Driving the Human. 

From June to November, the seven prototypes will be presented in three parts: Non-Human Perspectives: Sharing, Shaping, Sensing Habitats (June 17–July 30, 2023); Sharing Knowledge on Common Ground (August 12– September 24, 2023); and Speculative Ecosytems and Interspecies Collaborations (October 7–November 26, 2023).

 

Driving the Human exhibition, first part
Activation Day program
Saturday, June 17, 2023 

 

The first activation day of the exhibition Driving the Human on the topic of Non-Human Perspectives: Sharing, Shaping, Sensing Habitats presented the project and the newly released publication Driving the Human: Seven Prototypes for Eco-Social Renewal

In addition, in a workshop on collective cartographies with alternaA (Andra Pop-Jurj and Lena Geerts Danau), topics that are the focus of the first part could be further explored. Guided tours with the project teams invited visitors to immerse themselves in the  development processes of the prototypes.

11am – 1pm
Workshop with alternaA
A short introduction to collective cartographies construction of landscapes and digital ecologies.

2pm – 3pm
Book launch and Talks
With Sarah Donderer (ZKM), Sandra Fendl (acatech), Julia Ihls (HfG Karlsruhe), Freo Majer (Forecast), Lena Geerts Danau and Andra Pop-Jurj (Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North), Romy Kaiser and Paula Nerlich (Human-Bacteria Interfaces)

3pm – 3:30pm
Tours and Talks
In the exhibition space with the artists and researchers of each project.

 

 

View of installation Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation Human-Bacteria Interfaces.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation by Human-Bacteria Interfaces.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Paula Nerlich and Romy Kaiser of Human-Bacteria Interfaces
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Lena Geerts Danau of Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Crowd at the exhibition opening.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation Human-Bacteria Interfaces.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation by Human-Bacteria Interfaces.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Paula Nerlich and Romy Kaiser of Human-Bacteria Interfaces
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

View of installation Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Lena Geerts Danau of Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Crowd at the exhibition opening.
© ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. Photo: Felix Grünschloß

Exhibition text:

Over a process of three years of collaboration, research and experimentation, seven prototypes for eco-social renewal have emerged in an exchange between artists and scientists, which can now be presented for discussion in different contexts. 

Addressing the symbiosis of human and more-than-human beings in the 21st century changes our conception of what life means. In dealing with global warming, energy cycles and technological upheaval, as well as collective decision-making and novel processes of value and commodity exchange, interdisciplinary collaboration between art, science and technology is increasingly important. »Driving the Human« explores the interrelationships between humans, more-than-human beings, and the environment in terms of how all living things can survive through collaboration. 

The seven prototypes showcase viable concepts for the future that can be used to enable new ways of imagining life in the world. They suggest new ways we can interact with each other and what surrounds us, exploring how AI might mitigate rather than accelerate climate change; immerse us in new forms of community building through ancestral agricultural knowledge; use fiction as an imaginative tool for new forms of cross-species community; or create embodied connections as a means of understanding and transforming human impacts in vulnerable areas. Together, the prototypes reinforce perspectives in which collaboration and interdependence become essential, critical factors for life and survival on our planet.

Together with a comprehensive accompanying program, the prototypes invite people to explore together, to engage, and to find new ways of perceiving and accessing the world.

*****

The exhibition Driving the Human: Seven Prototypes for Eco-social Renewal will be on view in three parts:

June 17 to July 30, 2023
Non-Human Perspectives: Sharing, Shaping, Sensing Habitats
With Human Bacteria Interfaces and Monsters and Ghosts of the Far North

August 12 to September 24, 2023
Sharing Knowledge on Common Ground
With Sedekah Benih, TRONS’R’US and Virtual Sanctuary for Fertilizing Mourning

October 7 to November 26, 2023
Speculative Ecosystems and Interspecies Collaborations
With Do AIs Dream of Climate Chaos and The Backpack of Wings