Kevin Day Artist Talk: clouds, carbon, and computational systems
Thu Sep 12, 2024 6:00 PM - 8:30 PM EDT
Online, Zoom
Description
“There is no cloud, only someone else’s computer” - Baruch Gottlieb, "Digital Materialism" (2018)
In our world of increasing abstraction, Kevin Day is looking to bring digital materiality to the forefront. From chemical processes to the polymer of pixels, and from underwater internet cables to displaced communities and exploited labourers, there is an inherent cost in the digital technologies we hold in our hands and pockets. Our data, Day reveals, is by no means immaterial.
Accompanying the solo exhibition the medium is the environment, Day will be holding an artist talk to discuss his research and artistic practice, exploring how the digital environment subjugates both human and natural environments.
The artist talk will be available both in person at InterAccess's studio and online through Zoom. Link will be provided after registration, before the event.
Find more details about the exhibition here.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Kevin Day’s practice and research, encompassing sound, video, graph, web, and interactive media installations, examine contemporary art’s critical capacity in response to the current socio-political issues of digital culture, subverting the encoding, extraction, and exploitation by data colonialism and information capitalism. Informed by the philosophy of technology, critical theory, media studies, and digital materialism, his research and practice question the ubiquitous logic of framing the world through information, indicative of an information-based way of knowing, and resist the extraction and abstraction of algorithmic processes through an insistence on the presence of “noise” in the information-capital complex.
Day was born in Taipei, Taiwan. He received his MFA and PhD from the University of British Columbia and is currently based in Vancouver. He has exhibited at venues such as the Vancouver Art Gallery (Vancouver), Center for Creative Media (Hong Kong), Qubit (New York), Centre CLARK (Montreal), The New Gallery (Calgary), and University of Hamburg (Hamburg), and presented his research through the top international platforms for art and technology such as SIGGRAPH, ISEA, and Leonardo. His work had been generously funded by the Canada Council for the Arts and SSHRC. Currently, he teaches digital art in the UBC Bachelor of Media Studies program and the politics of algorithmic and information systems at the UBC School of Information.
Image courtesy of the artist.