Conference,
Speculative Geographies between Art and Science
| Neue Kulturgeografie | Augsburg DE
« Speculative Geographies between Art and Science – Insights into the mLAB»
During an evening salon at the NKG – Neue Kulturgeografie Conference in Augsburg, Germany on ‘Speculative Geographies between Art and Science – Insights into the mLAB’, a dialogue-based setting was created with contributions from EcoArtLab PhD researcher Johanna Paschen and other mLAB contributors, led by artist and mLAB coordinator Mirko Winkel.
An mLAB workshop was following the salon dialogue. During the workshop, questions surrounded: How to collaborate just? Who shapes the future? Then bags were created with the motto: Fragen zum Tragen!
The mLAB is an experimental laboratory at the University of Bern, cooperating with the EcoArtLab, that encourages researchers and students to explore new forms of transdisciplinary collaboration. The aim is to make new media, digital technologies and artistic working methods an integral part of knowledge generation and to reflect critically on them.
Photos: Rosa Philipp
« Speculative Geographies between Art and Science – Insights into the mLAB»
During an evening salon at the NKG – Neue Kulturgeografie Conference in Augsburg, Germany on ‘Speculative Geographies between Art and Science – Insights into the mLAB’, a dialogue-based setting was created with contributions from EcoArtLab PhD researcher Johanna Paschen and other mLAB contributors, led by artist and mLAB coordinator Mirko Winkel.
An mLAB workshop was following the salon dialogue. During the workshop, questions surrounded: How to collaborate just? Who shapes the future? Then bags were created with the motto: Fragen zum Tragen!
The mLAB is an experimental laboratory at the University of Bern, cooperating with the EcoArtLab, that encourages researchers and students to explore new forms of transdisciplinary collaboration. The aim is to make new media, digital technologies and artistic working methods an integral part of knowledge generation and to reflect critically on them.
Photos: Rosa Philipp


