Naturally Hypernatural
Visions of Nature (School of Visual Art, New York, 14.-16. Nov. 2014)
http://naturallyhypernatural.sva.edu/
http://naturallyhypernatural.eventbrite.com
Naturally Hypernatural: Visions of Nature is an interdisciplinary conference investigatingthe fluctuating "essences" of "nature" and the"natural" in the 21st century. Each of these terms carries with it an enormity of philosophical questions ranging from the alteration of life itself to dialogues concerning the notion of the Anthropocene, a term used to describe man's intervention into the natural world. The talks presented here will focus on contemporary issues in the visual arts as they intersect with the biological and geological sciences, confirming that nature remains an intrinsically mysterious, ever more mutable entity. At the present time, cellular parts are being remixed in laboratories to create synthetic organisms while geological transformations are forecasting wild swings in weather conditions. Human reproduction regularly occurs in Petri dishes while cucumbers are grown in space. The artificial and the natural now combine to form novel entities, never before seen on earth, while animal species dwindle down to extinction every day. Animals and plants are exhibited as contemporary art, while the realis conflated with the imaginary. Technological advances and their theoretical undertones have migrated into art practice producing New Media installations, Bio Art exhibitions and a global community of art practitioners adapting novel productions to cultural resources. In addition, visual art has become a social practice platform with projects that intersect with urban farming, DIY biology and extremes in performance art.
Naturally Hypernatural: Visions of Nature brings together artists, historians, curators, philosophers and scientists to examine and comment on these ideas. In addition, there will be an exhibition of work by students, alumni and faculty, generated through SVA's Bio Art Laboratory, the first of its kind in the U.S.A.
Organized by Suzanne Anker (Chair, BFA Fine Arts Department, School of Visual Arts, New York) and Sabine Flach (Chair, Department of Art History, University of Graz, Austria).