This research
project brings together artists, scientists, and curators to explore how seismic disturbances of the Earth shape perception,
bodies, and collective forms of living together.
Situated at the intersection of artistic
research, geology, somatic practices, performance art, and film making, the project understands seismography as an open, transdisciplinary
practice: a method of perceiving, translating, and relating bodies, technologies, and the planet Earth at sites of heightened
seismic activity.
Shaken Grounds. Seismography of Precarious Presences is a transdisciplinary
artistic research project that explores the interconnections between geological, social, and psychological upheavals. Starting
point is the observation that not only natural processes but also human interventions such as climate change and technological
interventions influence seismic dynamics and alter the stability of our environment.
At the center
is the question of how these tremors inscribe themselves in bodies, environments, and social contexts. Seismography is understood
here not only as a scientific method, but as an artistic practice of perception and relating. In this context, a “trembling
thought” (Édouard Glissant) emerges, one that detaches itself from the notion of solid ground and engages with movements,
shifts, and transitions.
Shaken Grounds brings together artists, scientists, and curators to develop
new perspectives on the relationship between the body, technology, and the earth. Diverse media and practices, including performance,
film, drawing, sound, and somatic approaches, enter into a dialogue with geological processes.
The
exhibition presents the results of the research project of the same name funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and also
marks the launch of the Creative Europe project Shaken Grounds: Art as Seismography, co-funded by the European Union.
With
contributions by:
Bjarki Bragason, Nikolaus Gansterer, Mariella Greil, Victor Jaschke, Peter Kozek, Anna
Líndal, Werner Möbius and Lucie Strecker
In artistic and scientific dialogue with:
Valerio
Acocella, Arno Böhler, Alexander Damianisch, Wolfgang Fiel, Oscar Fernandez Bellon, Helga Franza, Nicolas Freytag, Sabine
Folie, Aleksandar Gabrovski, Vesna Meštrić, Werner Möbius, Susanna Ravelli, Sylvia Scheidl, Ana Škegro, Kaloyan Vasev, VestAndPage,
Sandro de Vita and Mauro di Vito
Guided Tours:
- 12 May, 17:00 plus Public
Conversation
- 26 May, 17:00 plus Closing Reception
Related
eventsLive
Editing Session: Shaken GroundsJam
Session: Shaken GroundsShaken
Grounds: Art as Seismography