Speculum Artium Festival
Creed
The name Speculum Artium refers to a theoretical text by the Austrian artist, curator and theoretician, Peter Weibel. In his text titled the The Post-Media Condition (2005, see link bellow) he writes about the nature of the "relationship between art and politics which can be expressed as the speculum artium, or the mirror of art". In line with Weibel's theory, the festival sees new media technologies as potentially highly emancipatory spheres.
Speculum Artium presents not only various new-media productions but also strives to establish a critical reflection of the contemporary society, of its political and technological conditions.
Background
The festival was initially set up as a collaborative project under the supervision of the Academy of Fine Art and Design, Ljubljana, featuring also the ArtNetLab society, the Academy Of Fine Arts Prague, and the University of Applied Arts Vienna. It was held in the City Art Gallery Ljubljana.
In 2009 the festival moved to Delavski dom Trbovlje, with Peter Weibel curating the festival.
Collaborations
Speculum Artium often invites various art academies and education and research institutions to participate in its programme.
Beside the protagonists mentioned above, the festival has worked with the Faculty of Computer and Information Science, Ljubljana, the Arts Academy of the University of Nova Gorica, the Jožef Stefan Institute, the University of Tokyo, the University of Art and Design in Linz, and others.
Programme
Each year the festival is structured around a particular concept. Some of them were Art and Science to Empower (2017), Reality Under Surveillance (2016), Integrity of Reality (2015), and Exit Strategy – Art or Technicism (2010). The festival invites various curators (such as Herwig Steiner from Vienna, Srečo Dragan from Ljubljana, and Michaela Ortner from Linz), together with whom it presents emerging new media practices around the world as well as talks and presentations by scientists (like Hiroshi Ishiguro and the crew from Honda Robotics, presenting the humanoid robot ASIMO ) and theoreticians.
Some of the artists invited were Stelarc, ARART, Veronika Krenn and Špela Petohleb, Dorcas Müller, Brigitta Zics, Dan Scott, Michael Fisher, Juan Suanca, Lisa Hall, Aram Zarikian, Paolo Zappala, Jessica Pinney, Philip Cornett, Marc Bonet Folgosa, Christoph Schwarz, Julian Palacz, Thomas Frierss, Nik Skušek, Jure Fingušt, Dorian Španzel, Reinhard Gupfinger, Travis Kirton, Maša Jazbec, Group V.A.T., and Tiago Martins.
The festival usually also includes the exhibition of students' artworks, reflecting the issues of contemporary society by way of audio and video installations and interactive projects. It also has a rich accompanying programme with performances, happenings, workshops and concerts (hosting, for example, Laibach).
DigitalBigScreen
The DigitalBigScreen Festival, enacted since 2010, enables the viewing of video art in a movie theatre with a big cinematic screen (using a digital Sony KA4 projector), thus offering contemporary visual practices a very powerful medium. It also makes possible the transmission of the submitted works into the Slovenian Art Cinema network, therefore extending the audience and the reach of the target audience, that usually have no access to such contents.
The submissions for the screening come from all over the world. There is usually an international expert committee, bestowing awards for the best video. However, the programme of the festival varies from year to year, with, for example, the focus in 2017 being the Fluxfilm Anthology.
See also
- Delavski dom Trbovlje Cultural Centre
- Trbovlje, The New Media Setting
- Academy of Fine Art and Design
- Arts Academy of the University of Nova Gorica
- Zasavje Museum, Trbovlje
- ArtNetLab
External links
- Speculum Artium website
- DigitalBigScreen website
- Trbovlje, The New Media Setting website
- Trbovlje Cultural Centre website (in Slovenian)
- ArtNetLab website
- The Post-Media Condition, a text by Peter Weibel
- 2008 Speculu Artium webpage