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dc.date.accessioned2019-05-29T12:08:48Z
dc.date.available2019-05-29T12:08:48Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/88
dc.descriptionBiography: David is an artist and engineer with a focus on interactive installation art that deals with complexity and a systems worldview. He holds a B.A.Sc in System Design Engineering from the University of Waterloo (Canada), an M.A.Sc in Mechanical Engineering from the University of British Columbia (Canada), and an MFA in Interdisciplinary Studies from the University of British Columbia (Canada). He is currently a PhD Fellow at the IT University of Copenhagen, working on a PhD in robotics and plant ecologies under the supervision of Laura Beloff and the co-supervision of Kasper Støy. In his work as an engineer and artist, he is interested in exploring the relationships between humans, digital technology, and the biological world. He focuses on the complexities of those relationships and the ways in which our often simple, mechanistic view of those complex interconnections afford us an illusion of control over our environments.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleOn Scale and Fields: Artistic Practice and Agricultural Machines
dc.contributor.authorKadish, David
dc.description.abstractThis paper explores thematic parallels between artistic and agricultural practices in the postwar period to establish a link to media art and cultural practices that are currently emerging in urban agriculture. Industrial agriculture has roots in the post-WWII abundance of mechanical and chemical equipment and research. These systems are highly mechanically efficient. With minimal physical labour, they extract ever staggering crop yields from ever poorer soils in shifting climatic conditions. However, the fact of mechanical efficiency is used to mask a set of problems with industrial-scale agricultural systems that range from spreading pests and diseases to poor global distribution of concentrated regional food wealth. That the conversion of vegetatively diverse farmland into monochromatic fields was popularized at the same time as the arrival of colour field paintings like Barnett Newman’s The Voice of Fire is neither coincidental nor inconsequential. Both are a manifestation of a new consideration of the monolithic in their respective fields. They explore the possibilities – and reveal the hazards – of working at a large scale. Today, a new consideration of the smaller scale in agriculture is being undertaken with the adoption of interventionist strategies in urban agricultural practices like seed bombing and guerrilla gardening. At the same time, there is a proliferation of media-connected and miniature autonomous drones and robotics. Might this combination be the foundation for a novel media-art intervention into agricultural practice?
dc.subjectmedia art
dc.subjectrobotics
dc.subjectagriculture
dc.subjectmachines


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