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  </channel><item rdf:about="https://pablohelguera.substack.com/p/sadder-tropics">
    <title>Sadder Tropics - Beautiful Eccentrics</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-10T06:08:12+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://pablohelguera.substack.com/p/sadder-tropics</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["It has reminded me that rituals are not meaningful because they are old, patriotic, religious, or faithfully repeated. They become meaningful because they are inhabited together. Their purpose is not merely to preserve tradition but to strengthen the invisible bonds that allow a community to recognize itself: to express gratitude, to mourn together, to celebrate together, to remind us that our lives acquire significance through one another. Perhaps this is what Huyghe’s monkey ultimately lacks—not freedom, exactly, but a world capable of answering its gestures."]]></description>
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    <title>William Leidesdorff Mural</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-10T05:34:00+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://acedsf.org/william-leidesdorff-mural</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Beyond the Sea – The Life and Legacy of William Leidesdorff 

Twin Walls Mural Co’s mural aims to celebrate the life and legacy of William Alexander Leidesdorff, a founding father of San Francisco and the Bay Area. A biracial man, he was an exceptional social, economic, and political leader in the pre-gold rush era of San Francisco. We wanted to celebrate his legacy and passion for community, innovation, and adventure as it lives on through the city’s diversity and spirit.

The mural starts with his birth on the island of St. Croix and the beginning of his incredible journey with his 106lb Schooner “Julia Ann” on abstract waves of the Pacific Ocean currents that flow throughout the composition. A ship’s steering wheel acts as a halo behind Captain Leidesdorff and above, a map with fleur-de-lis which depicts his journey to New Orleans. It is there that he became a master of vessels. He often sailed between New Orleans and New York. Eager to head west, he purchased the Julia Ann, which took him on his voyage to the Pacific into a beautiful cove, that was then known as Yerba Buena cove, but would later become San Francisco. It is here that he begins his trade route. The sugar cane to his right represents some of the trade to and from Hawaii, Yerba Buena, Panama, St. Croix, Brazil, Chile, and Sitka, Alaska.

The compass symbolizes his life and travels as a master sailor and merchant. The map of Rancho Rio de los Americanos represents his connection with California, which was, at the time, still Mexico, the land the Mexican government gave him, and his title and position as Vice Consul to Mexico. Captain Leidesdorff purchased the “Sitka” from Alaska. She was the first steamboat to sail on the San Francisco Bay and in California. Later becoming “Rainbow,” the Sitka followed the Sacramento River even after discovering gold.

The mural then flows to Leidesdorff’s legacy and poignant events in US history before and after his death. These include the building of the first hotel in San Francisco, the land he donated to open the first public school there, having the Declaration of Independence read for the first time in California, and the Gold Rush, as depicted by Black and Asian men at a site. This includes one of the three black 49ers who came over as slaves and created their own successful business hauling supplier to remote mining camps.  Chinese and Philippine railroad workers are included to honor those who helped to build California and acknowledge the proximity of the mural to Chinatown.

After his death, Leidesdorff’s remains were placed in the front entrance of Mission Dolores. From there, the journey continues to present-day San Francisco and into our future. The three individuals in the boat depict a future where San Franciscans can steer their own futures, the future looking brighter, more open and green. 

[embed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgFdbinwk30 ]

Twin Walls Mural Company

Elaine Chu and Marina Perez- Wong are the dynamic duo behind the mural arts collaboration Twin Walls Mural Company (TWMC). They believe in the power of visual narratives to capture and reflect a community's history, struggles, dreams, and intentions. San Francisco natives, Elaine and Marina, met at the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts in 1997 and instantly formed a friendship. They began painting murals with Precita Eyes Muralists Association under the guidance of muralist Susan Kelk Cervantes. Each mural they worked on collaboratively made them realize that they work like twins when painting. 

They formed TWMC in 2013 and have since designed and painted over 40 murals in the Bay Area and New York City. Elaine and Marina are both motivated by the healing of current and generational trauma and the transformation of the viewer and themselves through visual language, color, and collaboration. Together their partnership continues to flourish with intricate visual stories of hope, balance, and community. Their work reflects growing up in the Bay Area, celebrating the women and individuals who inspire them and the changes they wish to manifest through bright colors and semi-realism."

[Map: https://maps.app.goo.gl/TG1AkAU867dNHpFH8 ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>sanfrancisco murals williamleidesdorff history 2023 stcroix virginislands elainechu marinaperez-wong art publicart</dc:subject>
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    <title>Mandate to participate: A roundtable with “Living to Learn” contributors - Features - Education - e-flux</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-09T16:43:05+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.e-flux.com/education/features/6732760/mandate-to-participate-a-roundtable-with-living-to-learn-contributors</link>
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    <title>Artists Are Filling SF With Monuments to Ordinary People | KQED</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-09T16:34:38+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.kqed.org/arts/13991360/new-monuments-san-francisco-shaping-legacy-sfac</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Artists are creating temporary monuments to ordinary people as part of the Shaping Legacy project."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll/the-ai-design-aesthetic-thats-taking-over-the-internet">
    <title>The A.I.-Design Aesthetic That’s Taking Over the Internet | The New Yorker</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-09T06:09:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll/the-ai-design-aesthetic-thats-taking-over-the-internet</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["How Anthropic’s new tool, Claude Design, is creating overnight web-design clichés."]]></description>
<dc:subject>anthropic claude genai generativeai 2026 kylechayka technology design art aesthetics sameness clauddesign taste mattström-awn davidmcgillivray celinenguyen grassdx newsletrix wesleywangmedia deploygraph ai artificialintelligence lucasgelfond llms charleseames rayeames eames modernism hilarygridley writerbuilder</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://brooklynrail.org/2025/10/artseen/ben-shahn-on-nonconformity/">
    <title>Ben Shahn: On Nonconformity - The Brooklyn Rail</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-08T07:21:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://brooklynrail.org/2025/10/artseen/ben-shahn-on-nonconformity/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><dc:subject>benshahn 2025 davidcarrier nonconformity honotrédaumier politics art</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://us9.campaign-archive.com/?u=9415dbe64ca115afcafb5b3cb&amp;id=582d57a6a9">
    <title>Black Mountain College: A Way of Thinking</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-07T18:45:08+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://us9.campaign-archive.com/?u=9415dbe64ca115afcafb5b3cb&amp;id=582d57a6a9</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Black Mountain College is remembered as a remarkable school in the mountains of Western North Carolina. It was home to extraordinary artists, architects, musicians, poets, dancers, scientists, educators, and students whose work helped shape the twentieth century.

But Black Mountain College is bigger than a place.

It is a way of thinking.

Founded in 1933, the College proposed something both simple and radical: that education could be a shared act of discovery rather than the transfer of knowledge from expert to student. Learning wasn't confined to classrooms. It happened in the studio, on the farm, around the dinner table, while constructing buildings, during performances, on long walks across campus, and in conversations that stretched late into the evening. Some of the most meaningful discoveries happen where different ways of thinking meet.

The College asked questions that still resonate today.

What if curiosity mattered more than certainty
What if listening was valued as deeply as speaking?
What if making, thinking, and living were not separate pursuits, but expressions of the same creative life?
What if education was not simply preparation for life, but life itself?

Black Mountain College never claimed to have perfected these ideas. It struggled. It argued. It evolved. Like every meaningful experiment, it was marked by contradiction as well as brilliance. Experiments are not valuable because they are flawless. They matter because they expand what we imagine is possible.

The College didn't leave us a blueprint.
It left us a way of making.

A way of listening.
A way of learning.
A way of working together.
A way of remaining open to what comes next."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://dohadebates.com/arts-media/contemporary-art-progressive-or-pointless/">
    <title>Contemporary art: Progressive or pointless? - Doha Debates</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-07T15:50:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://dohadebates.com/arts-media/contemporary-art-progressive-or-pointless/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["How do we define great art in the 21st century?

Some critics argue that contemporary art has lost touch with the universal principles and artistic traditions that define its greatness. Others see its break with tradition as liberating, a move toward more inclusion, experimentation and personal and political expression.

This conversation is an exploration of what makes great art, particularly in this century. Is it defined by adherence to tradition, or disruption and reinvention? Is artistic beauty understood across time and culture, or does each generation need to redefine it? And with the AI era upon us, what even constitutes art in the first place?"

[direct link to video on YouTube:

"Doha Debates: Is it time to reconsider contemporary art?"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=352DIUX4QMk

"Is contemporary art relevant today?

In this episode of @DohaDebates podcast, host Nadir Nahdi is joined by Wafaa Bilal, Samar Younes, Fen de Villiers and Molly Crabapple to discuss whether contemporary art remains relevant in today’s world, as well as the role of artists in addressing social issues. 

The views expressed in this episode are the guests’ own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. Visit the @DohaDebates YouTube channel for the extended version."

on Apple Podcasts:

https://podcasts.apple.com/lu/podcast/is-contemporary-art-relevant-today/id1867847336?i=1000767406512

also here:
https://omny.fm/shows/doha-debates/is-contemporary-art-relevant-today

mentioned (but not linked) here:
https://www.frontporchrepublic.com/2026/07/consuming-swatch-or-valuing-craftsmanship/ ]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://lithub.com/on-joan-didion-and-the-art-of-looking-back/">
    <title>Literary Hub » On Joan Didion and the Art of Looking Back</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-04T12:33:13+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://lithub.com/on-joan-didion-and-the-art-of-looking-back/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Maggie McKinley Rereads One of America’s Great Nostalgists"

...

"In Thomas Wolfe’s posthumously published novel You Can’t Go Home Again (1940), protagonist George Webber finds himself in Germany amid the rise of Nazism in the 1930s and “face to face with something old and genuinely evil in the spirit of man.” Upon his return to America, Webber acknowledges that the darkness he has witnessed is not confined to Germany but is everywhere around him, a realization that “shook his inner world to its foundations.” Disillusioned, Webber reflects on the inability to return to a previous worldview, a previous self, or a previous innocence, though his realization remains tinged with longing:

<blockquote>You can’t go back home to your family, back home to your childhood, back home to romantic love, back home to a young man’s dreams of glory and fame, back home to exile, to escape to Europe and some foreign land, back home to lyricism, to singing just for singing’s sake, back home to aestheticism, to one’s youthful idea of “the artist” and the all-sufficiency of “art” and “beauty” and “love” . . . away from all the strife and conflict of the world . . . back home to someone who can help you, save you, ease you, ease the burden for you, back home to the old forms and systems of things which once seemed everlasting but which are changing all the time—back home to the escapes of Time and Memory.</blockquote>

Webber’s unsettling revelations do not end in defeatism, however; rather, he is inspired toward “a definite sense of new direction.” While he possesses a keen awareness of the corruption that surrounds him, he also exhibits a distinct optimism for the future, particularly the future of America, which he believes still has the capacity to conquer evil, and in the end he insists that “this glorious assurance is not only our living hope, but our dream to be accomplished.” Webber’s conception of the future is thus one that simultaneously encompasses and rejects a nostalgic view of the past, as his forward-looking vision is shaped by a longing for the return of a past moment that collides with the realization of its impossibility.

Of course, Wolfe is not the only American writer to contend with a nostalgic impulse that is deeply connected to experiences of chaos and change. As social, industrial, and technological shifts continued to inform art, politics, and commerce over the course of the twentieth century, writers ranging from F. Scott Fitzgerald to Toni Morrison also examined the allure of looking back, of yearning for a purportedly more stable past. Yet I would argue that there are few contemporary American writers who examine the complexity of nostalgia with more depth, breadth, curiosity, and prescience than Joan Didion. Like Wolfe before her, Didion acknowledges the multitude of ways we might define “home,” and recognizes the inevitable pull of nostalgia for a particular time, place, aesthetic, hope, ideology, or feeling even as she, too, harbors an increasing mistrust of past narratives that “once seemed everlasting.”

Yet Didion takes these ideas much further than Wolfe—and further than most writers, for that matter. Her engagement with nostalgia is not confined to a single character, publication, or era, but defines her fiction and nonfiction across decades, informing her discussions of politics, gender, rhetoric, media, and much more. Her nostalgia also becomes increasingly future-oriented, in a way that is more cautious than that of a character like George Webber, but which nevertheless undermines assessments of her worldview as nihilistic or fatalistic, and complicates common understandings of nostalgia as a purely conservative impulse."

...

"Indeed, nostalgia is at the center of nearly everything she wrote, and I argue that by investigating the various ways she engages with and defines the concept in both fiction and nonfiction, we can better understand the contradictory terms that have come to define Didion’s writing and literary persona: fatalistic and hopeful, fragile and strong, detached and connected, feminist icon and antifeminist, humble and haughty, conservative and liberal. Reading Didion’s work through the lens of nostalgia theory allows us to better understand the source of these tensions, and to reevaluate her views on American history, regional identity, hubris and imperialism, gender, political theater, the counterculture, national rhetoric, grief and loss, and more."

...

"While Didion’s cultural observations are often filtered through a personal experience of nostalgia, more often the latter functions as a critical lens that she discerningly turns onto twentieth-century American culture. At the same time, nostalgia theory becomes a tool we might turn back onto Didion’s work, useful in probing not only her own enigmatic ideas but also the ways modern American history has been narrativized, and how that impacts our cultural and political discussions in the present moment.

An interrogation of nostalgia is also, I would argue, part of her own truth-seeking project as a New Journalist, and her exploration of the allure and menace of nostalgia takes on new dimensions as she directs her gaze outward. Indeed, the nature of New Journalism as a genre allows Didion to demonstrate an acute awareness of her own narrative construction; she draws attention to the fact that her cultural criticism might be tinged with nostalgia and then proceeds to critique this tendency in herself."

...

"In both fiction and nonfiction, she documents the ways that America has used nostalgia to “pernicious” effect on a political and imperial level, a factor that continues to shape our national mythos (Where I Was From). As a nearly ubiquitous presence, nostalgia becomes a recurring theme, a character trait, a narrative perspective, a subject of her criticism, and a critical device in her work. Didion’s work emphasizes that while nostalgia can be paralyzing and foster stagnation when wielded at the institutional level and as an unquestioned worldview, political tactic, or marketing technique, it is also a natural inclination, one that allows us to make sense of our place in the world at any given moment, and can be a tool for uncovering personal truths and identifying cultural and national myths."]]></description>
<dc:subject>joandidion nostalgia home memory 2026 maggiemckinley thomaswolfe time fscottfitzgerald tonimorrison literature svetlanaboym society collectivememory politics psychology art culture identity collectiveidentity us brucebawer ellenfriedman kathleenvandenberg williamhandley alissawilkinson hollywood class gender americanlife fiction nonfiction newjournalism journalism narrative present future past remembering subjectivity historicization idealism stangation worldview nationamyths myth myths rhetoric history counterculture conservatism imperialsim</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.sourcetype.com/store/51534/dictionary-of-the-illegible">
    <title>Dictionary of the Illegible - Source Type: Store - Source Type</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-03T01:27:36+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.sourcetype.com/store/51534/dictionary-of-the-illegible</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Dictionary of the Illegible explores the limits of language—its beginnings and its ends—from humanity’s earliest marks to the dissolution of modern alphabets before our eyes. Mapping more than 400 examples of illegibility drawn from Indigenous cultures to imagined future civilizations, the book spans contemporary art, science fiction, politics, architecture, and technology. Dictionary of the Illegible proposes illegibility as a strategy for navigating a world increasingly governed by visibility, efficiency, and total surveillance."]]></description>
<dc:subject>illegibility typography language indigeneity indigenous visibility legibility laurenzbrunner 2026 efficiency surveillance art sciencefiction scifi architecture politics technology dictionaries</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:0971db4a1b31/</dc:identifier>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olyBoqfEPGY">
    <title>Lenka Clayton in &quot;Human Nature&quot; – Season 12 | Art21 - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-07-02T02:47:02+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olyBoqfEPGY</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Art21 proudly presents an artist segment featuring Lenka Clayton from the "Human Nature" episode in the twelfth season of the Art in the Twenty-First Century series. 

"Human Nature" premiered in June 2026 on PBS. 

Lenka Clayton was born in 1977 in Cornwall, England, and lives and works in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Learn more about the artist: https://art21.org/lenkaclayton/ "

[See also:
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/06/lenka-clayton-art-21-film/ ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>lenkaclayton 2026 art artmaking collections collecting motherhood pittsburgh everyday typewriters maternityleave measurement parenting artresidencies lighthouses nonsense children engagement sharedexperience experience</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://open-city.org.uk/events/moving1">
    <title>Moving with the city — Open City</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T05:45:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://open-city.org.uk/events/moving1</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Join Open City for this site-sensing workshop — led by artist Alisa Oleva — where history and urban planning will be discovered through touch, listening and sensations 

By using elements of parkour and low impact movements participants of this workshop — which is open to movers and city explorers of all levels — will explore the architecture of social housing in north London including Highgate New Town designed by Hungarian architect Peter Tábori and Lismore Circus in Gospel Oak through deep listening, mapping and playing."]]></description>
<dc:subject>alisaoleva walking parkour 2021 art listening deeplistening mapping play petertábori lismorecircus sensing sensory walkshops situationist psychogeography</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.buildhollywood.co.uk/features/walk/">
    <title>WALK – monthly urban art walks with Alisa Oleva - BUILDHOLLYWOOD</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T05:44:15+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.buildhollywood.co.uk/features/walk/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["A series of free monthly urban art walks over a period of one year.

As part of our latest Your Space Or Mine project, we appointed performance and walking artist Alisa Oleva as Artist in Residence, commissioned to work from BUILDHOLLYWOOD’s creative space, The CarWash, in Shoreditch.

“Each month I will host a walk which will start at The CarWash venue and then venture into the surrounding neighbourhood. Every walk will have a different theme, exploring the everyday, sensorial ways of engaging with the city, sounds, textures, memories and histories, emotional map-making, and the politics of public space” – Alisa Oleva.

Where does the city take you? Where do you turn next? Who walks these streets? What’s the sound of your own footsteps? Who owns the city? What’s here, and what do we wish was still here? Where do you find yourself now? These are the questions that Alisa explored on her experimental urban walks.

Over the past 12 months, Alisa’s walks have offered an act of collective close looking and reimagining – opening up spaces we don’t usually notice to make visible different ways of being in, and thinking about, the city.

To celebrate the end of our WALK series, we hosted a final Gathering event on the 20th July, which was an opportunity for past participants and for those who are curious to come together to celebrate over walking, sharing food, map making and conversations. The BUILDHOLLYWOOD CarWash has been the starting and finishing point of each event and we were excited to host the final Gathering at this space once again. "]]></description>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://akademija.whw.hr/fellows/alisa-oleva">
    <title>WHW Akademija - Alisa Oleva</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:42:14+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://akademija.whw.hr/fellows/alisa-oleva</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Alisa Oleva is a walking artist based in London. Her practice unfolds within the spaces and streets of the city, exploring the politics of public space, how the city moves and how we move it, urban choreography and urban archaeology, traces and surfaces, borders and inventories, intervals and silences, passages and cracks. Her projects have taken the form of one-to-one and collective performances, walking scores, personal and intimate encounters, gatherings, parkour sessions, walkshops, soundwalks, and audiowalks.

Alisa holds a BA and MA from The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, and an MA in Performance from Goldsmiths, University of London. She is currently undertaking a fully funded practice-based PhD at the University of East London. She has worked with various places and communities, including Dnipro, Mariupol, Belgrade, Minsk, Berlin, Felixstowe, Leeds, Dudlange, La Sauvage, Brussels, Taoyuan, and others. In 2023, she was the recipient of an Another Route bursary and is currently leading a series of monthly art walks in East London, commissioned by BUILDHOLLYWOOD."

...

"Artist statement

Why walking? My impulse to walk stems from my experience of migration, which pushed me out of precarious housing conditions and led me to search for connection and a relationship with a new city through walking it. Over time, it developed into a walking art practice, in which I walk and invite others to walk with me, using walking as a methodology and practice to spark conversations, explore our connection to the everyday, question the politics of public space, and nurture a more sense of belonging and connection to land and place. 

I walk one-to-one with both strangers and friends. I also walk with big groups and small groups. I have organised various simultaneous walks across distances, across places, and across borders. 

Together with others who have also experienced migration, I explore how walking can become a way of home-finding - what routes we weave in our new homes, and what paths from our previous homes we carry with us. I also use counter-mapping as a way to walk the routes we remember but can no longer access.

I often walk at night, exploring the urban nightscape and how the city transforms in darkness. I’m interested in how the experience of walking at night differs for different bodies in different locations. 

In my work as a walking artist, walking is both the medium, the material, and the practice, while the streets, cities, parks, forests, and other kinds of places are both the site and my collaborators."]]></description>
<dc:subject>alisaoleva walking art situationist psychogeography walkshops gatherings parkour soundwalks audiowalks walkingscores</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:d1d9b3112535/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://hyperallergic.com/alisa-oleva-walking-home-performistanbul/">
    <title>Walk With Me: A Performance Artist Adapts to the Pandemic</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:41:03+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://hyperallergic.com/alisa-oleva-walking-home-performistanbul/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["For two weeks last fall, performance artist Alisa Oleva walked with 33 different women in Istanbul; sometimes for 30 minutes, sometimes for three hours, but always from 1500 miles away."]]></description>
<dc:subject>2021 alisaoleva istanbul jenniferhattam walking 2020 art situationist psychogeography walkshops</dc:subject>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:istanbul"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:jenniferhattam"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:walking"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:2020"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/13505068241262923">
    <title>Unveiling urban landscapes: Alisa Oleva’s performances during the pandemic - Raffaella Tartaglia, 2024</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:40:03+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/13505068241262923</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["This text explores the evolving landscape of performance art in the face of pandemic restrictions, shedding light on the repercussions of audience deprivation and the subsequent exploration of digital platforms as a means of artistic expression. Focusing on some artistic performances of Alisa Oleva, the text investigates how her exploration of touching and walking as a medium influences the understanding of urban landscapes. By using the city as her studio and manipulating everyday life, Oleva uncovers the hidden stories and meanings embedded within inside and outside spaces, to examine questions related to women’s histories, traces, and surfaces. In particular, we focus on Walking Home (2020), a performance that, in addition to providing an interesting example of walking as an aesthetic practice, raises political and activist questions, such as how the pandemic-induced confinement masks deeper issues, namely the safety of the domestic environment for those who identify themself as women. Through various performances, we delve into the theme of seeing and touching, emphasising the significance of sensory perception as embodied human beings. Moreover, the text highlights how our passages and connections with different environments contribute to shaping the very meaning of the places we encounter in the world. In addition, the text acknowledges the transformative power of personal experiences in crafting the narrative of our collective story."]]></description>
<dc:subject>raffaellatartaglia alisaoleva seonsory walking seeing touching 2020 2024 everday situationist psychogeography art walkshops</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:228df78dfd78/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:raffaellatartaglia"/>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:seonsory"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:walking"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:seeing"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:touching"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:2020"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:2024"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:everday"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:situationist"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:psychogeography"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:art"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://compassliveart.org.uk/walk-me-there-a-round-up/">
    <title>Walk Me There - A Round Up - Compass Live Art / Compass Festival</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:37:12+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://compassliveart.org.uk/walk-me-there-a-round-up/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Over Alisa’s residency period in August, she went on one-to-one walks, hosted two group “walkshops” and created some beautiful memories with people living in Leeds: Anastasiia Abramchuk, Madda Moretti, Tatiana, Yuma, Haval, Maja Novak, coni, Mishka and Dasha."]]></description>
<dc:subject>alisaoleva walking situationist psychology walkshops place place-basedlearning art ephermal ephemerality ursulaleguin ursulakleguin leeds cities urban psychogeography</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8c6af2a96c22/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:situationist"/>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljqTo7GC7HM">
    <title>Walking and the Art of Public Space: Alisa Oleva on Cities, Belonging &amp; Nuart Aberdeen - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:15:35+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljqTo7GC7HM</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Walking can be much more than getting from A to B. In this interview from Nuart Aberdeen, walking artist Alisa Oleva talks about how she turns walks through the city into a form of art and a way of seeing places differently.

Alisa describes one-to-one walks with people who are new to a city, helping them explore ideas of home and belonging through everyday routes. She talks about blindfolded walks, long group walks that repeat the same path for hours, and workshops where people try simple exercises like walking differently, touching surfaces or noticing small details. She also explains how  she spends time “deep hanging out” in neighbourhoods. She connects her work to ideas from performance art, psychogeography and parkour. Especially the idea of “desire lines”, the paths people make when they don’t follow the official route.

Contents
00:00 – Walking as an art practice
01:50 – What it feels like on a walk
05:00 – Preparing a walk in a new city 
07:30 – Long-term projects, deep hanging out and working with strangers
10:20 – Simultaneous distant walks (Mariupol and beyond)
12:10 – Covid, virtual walks and “let me be your eyes”
14:30 – Migration, London and how the practice began
18:30 – Parkour, desire lines and small acts of disobedience in the city
21:20 – Performance, liveness and walking scores"

[via:

"Alisa Oleva the Walking Artist Inviting Us to View the City Differently • Inspiring City"
https://inspiringcity.com/2026/06/22/alisa-oleva-the-walking-artist-inviting-us-to-view-the-city-differently/ ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>alisaoleva walking 2026 london cities experience art walkingart urban wandering psychogeography situationist home belonging slow desirelines place attention movement noticing observation aberdeen scotland publicsace performance immersion familiarization learning howwelearn place-basedlearning everyday hangingout parkour notknowing strangers gettinglost time unknowing discovery exposure disoberdience walkingscores georgesperec geography resistance senses sensory walkshops</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:76ea0542a914/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:gettinglost"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://alisaoleva.com/">
    <title>Alisa Oleva</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:14:01+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://alisaoleva.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Alisa Oleva is a walking artist based in London who works within the spaces and streets of the city, exploring the politics of public space, how the city moves us and how we move it, urban choreography and urban archaeology, traces and surfaces, borders and inventories, intervals and silences, passages and cracks. She creates one-to-one and collective performances, walking scores, personal and intimate encounters, gatherings, soft parkour sessions, walkshops, soundwalks, and audiowalks.

Alisa holds a BA and MA from The Courtauld Institute of Art and an MA in Performance from Goldsmiths. She is currently doing a fully funded practice-based PhD at the University of East London."]]></description>
<dc:subject>alisaoleva walking psychogeography art performance situationist walkshops</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:1a04a8ae3314/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.walkinghome.online/">
    <title>Walking Home | Alisa Oleva</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:13:38+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.walkinghome.online/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Sanatçı | Artist Alisa Oleva
Invitation to “Walking Home” from Performistanbul"

...

"Alisa Oleva invites women of Istanbul to participate in her Performance!

The first residency programme of Performistanbul is brought to life! Alisa Oleva is the first artist nominated to the “Artistic Development Programme'' as part of Performistanbul’s artist residency focused on performance artists, the project is conducted with the support of British Council’s #WomenPowerinCulture Grant Scheme, in collaboration with Live Art Development Agency, (LADA, London). Alisa Oleva is a Russian artist living and working in London, presenting her performance Walking Home in two channels both in Istanbul and London. Oleva is searching for women* who self identify themselves as women participants to walk with her towards home. For walking “home” together with Oleva, the final participation date for applications is on the 25thof October 2020. 

At the performance entitled `Walking Home, while the participants will be walking towards the place where they describe as “home” in Istanbul, the artist will accompany each partner within one-to-one sessions from London by connecting via phones without the presence of an audience. In order to designate the starting point of the walking, a map that reads the city through the locations of historical and forensic figures, artefacts and events related to women will guide the participants. In these traces there are such as; the Sultanahmet Square in the remembrance of Halide Edip Adıvar’s  activist and political speech in 1919, Yıldız Park in memory of Gürdal Duyar’s sculpture that represents Istanbul in the form of a woman’s body,  Fındıklı park where Füsun Onur’s 50thyear sculpture that got removed by the city hall crew during the organisation as well as selected places such as Süreyya Opera. 

With the following questions; “If I ask you to walk me home, where would you take me? Does home mean feeling safe? What makes you feel like at home? Is it where you live now or a different place? Or is it not even a place? Now, it is time to walk and find home!", the artist is searching for the answer of what could be the meaning of the notion of “home”. She invites women* living in Istanbul to share her footsteps within that journey. The notion of “home”, that may refer to different meanings such as the nest, safe space, family, escape, indefensible area, self-reflection, is at the centre of the Walking Home performance. The artist will ask several questions to the participants in order to get a response to the meanings of “home”, as a result it could lead to various descriptions such as an actual home; a park, a seaside, a library or a place which reflects that feeling or a person and an object. On the other hand, her questions could also  remain unanswered...  

If you would like to apply to the open call in order to think about the concept of “home” collaboratively, please write to info@performistanbul.org until the 25thof October 2020, Sunday. While the open call continues, the performances will start on the 18thof October and last until the 31stof October. The timetable and all details will be shared with the participants via email and the times will be organised with the artist."

...

"Performistanbul’dan “Eve Yürüyüş” İçin Davet  
Alisa Oleva, İstanbul’daki kadınları Performansa Katılmaya Çağırıyor!

Performistanbul’un ilk misafir sanatçı programı hayata geçiyor! British Council’ın #KültürdeKadınGücü Destek Programı  sayesinde, Live Art Development Agency (LADA, Londra) ile iş birliği yaparak geliştirdiği, performans sanatçılarına özel “Sanatsal Gelişim Programı”na ilk seçilen sanatçı Alisa Oleva oldu. Rus asıllı Londra merkezli performans sanatçısı Alisa Oleva, Eve Yürüyüş (Walking Home) adlı projesini İstanbul ve Londra olmak üzere iki ayaklı olarak sunuyor. Oleva, kendisiyle birlikte yürüyecek İstanbul’daki kadın* ve kendini kadın olarak tanımlayan katılımcıları arıyor. Oleva ile “ev”e doğru yürümek için gerçekleştirilen açık çağrıya son katılım tarihi 25 Ekim 2020.

Birebir yapılacak yürüyüşlerde, katılımcılar İstanbul’da “ev” olarak tanımladıkları yere doğru yürürken, sanatçı Oleva’nın da Londra’dan eşlik edeceği Eve Yürüyüş adlı performansta, aralarındaki bağı telefonları sağlayacak ve süreçler izleyicisiz olarak gerçekleşecek. Kadınların şehre bıraktığı izler üzerinden belirlenen başlangıç noktalarını seçerken, katılımcıya, kadın(lar)la ilgili tarihi ve önemli şahıslar, olaylar, yapıtlar üzerinden şehrin okumasının yapıldığı bir harita kılavuzluk edecek. Bu izler arasında, Halide Edip Adıvar’ın 1919 yılında yaptığı aktivist ve politik bir konuşma anısına Fatih’teki Sultanahmet Meydanı, Gürdal  Duyar’ın İstanbul’u kadın bedeniyle temsil ettiği heykeli anısına Yıldız Parkı, Füsun Onur’un belediye ekipleri tarafından park düzenlemesi sırasında kaldırılan 50. yıl heykeli anısına Fındıklı Parkı ve Süreyya Operası gibi yer ve mekânlar bulunuyor. Süreç dâhilinde her katılımcı, kendi hikâyelerinden bir parkur oluşturarak, bu haritanın bir parçası olarak ortak yaratıcılarından birine dönüşecek. Açık çağrı bir seçim olmadan, çağrıya yanıt veren herkesi kapsayacak ve performans gece veya gündüz fark etmeksizin karşılıklı belirlenen başlangıç noktası ve süresi çerçevesinde hayata geçecek.

Sanatçı “Benimle eve yürümeni istesem, beni nereye götürürdün? Ev, güvende hissetmekle aynı anlamı taşır mı? Sana ev hissini ne verir? Bu yaşadığın yer mi yoksa başka bir yer midir? Bu belki bir yer bile değildir? Şimdi yürümenin ve evi bulmanın zamanı!” sözleriyle “ev” kavramının ne anlama geldiği sorusunun cevaplarını arıyor. İstanbul’da yaşayan kadınları* eve giden yolda, adımlarını paylaşmaya çağırıyor. Yuva, güvenli bölge, aile, kaçış, savunmasız alan, öze dönüş gibi kişi için pek çok tanımı çağrıştırabilecek “ev” kavramı, Eve Yürüyüş adlı performansın merkezini oluşturuyor. Katılımcılara, “ev” kavramını tanımlamak için çeşitli sorular yönlendirecek olan sanatçı, herhangi bir ev tarifi yanıtı alabileceği gibi bir park, deniz kenarı, kütüphane veya bu hissi taşıyan herhangi bir yer, kişi veya nesne gibi pek çok karşılık da bulabilir. Yanıtsız da kalabilir...

Siz de açık çağrıya katılmak ve “ev” kavramını beraber düşünüp sorgulamak için 25 Ekim 2020 Pazar gününe kadar info@performistanbul.org adresine yazabilirsiniz. Açık çağrı devam ederken, 18 Ekim’den itibaren başlayacak performanslar 31 Ekim tarihine kadar devam edecek. Zamanı  sanatçıyla beraber kararlaştırılacak performans ile ilgili detaylı bilgiler başvuran katılımcılarla mail aracılığıyla paylaşılacak."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.fetch.london/post/walking-is-so-simple-yet-so-deeply-complex-in-conversation-with-with-alisa-oleva">
    <title>&quot;WALKING IS SO SIMPLE YET SO DEEPLY COMPLEX&quot;: IN CONVERSATION WITH ALISA OLEVA</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T03:13:26+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.fetch.london/post/walking-is-so-simple-yet-so-deeply-complex-in-conversation-with-with-alisa-oleva</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><dc:subject>2025 walking alisaoleva psychogeography art performance situationist listenting senses sensory transience ephemeral ephemerality documentation movement parkour community everyday audio resistance productivity london walkshops</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://inspiringcity.com/2026/06/22/alisa-oleva-the-walking-artist-inviting-us-to-view-the-city-differently/">
    <title>Alisa Oleva the Walking Artist Inviting Us to View the City Differently • Inspiring City</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-29T02:53:49+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://inspiringcity.com/2026/06/22/alisa-oleva-the-walking-artist-inviting-us-to-view-the-city-differently/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[[embedded video:

"Walking and the Art of Public Space: Alisa Oleva on Cities, Belonging & Nuart Aberdeen"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljqTo7GC7HM 

"Walking can be much more than getting from A to B. In this interview from Nuart Aberdeen, walking artist Alisa Oleva talks about how she turns walks through the city into a form of art and a way of seeing places differently.

Alisa describes one-to-one walks with people who are new to a city, helping them explore ideas of home and belonging through everyday routes. She talks about blindfolded walks, long group walks that repeat the same path for hours, and workshops where people try simple exercises like walking differently, touching surfaces or noticing small details. She also explains how  she spends time “deep hanging out” in neighbourhoods. She connects her work to ideas from performance art, psychogeography and parkour. Especially the idea of “desire lines”, the paths people make when they don’t follow the official route.

Contents
00:00 – Walking as an art practice
01:50 – What it feels like on a walk
05:00 – Preparing a walk in a new city 
07:30 – Long-term projects, deep hanging out and working with strangers
10:20 – Simultaneous distant walks (Mariupol and beyond)
12:10 – Covid, virtual walks and “let me be your eyes”
14:30 – Migration, London and how the practice began
18:30 – Parkour, desire lines and small acts of disobedience in the city
21:20 – Performance, liveness and walking scores"]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.chroniclebooks.com/products/on-doing-nothing">
    <title>On Doing Nothing: Finding Inspiration in Idleness, by Roman Muradov (2018) | Chronicle Books</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-27T23:13:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.chroniclebooks.com/products/on-doing-nothing</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["In an age of obsessive productivity and stress, this illustrated ode to idleness invites readers to explore the pleasures and possibilities of slowing down. Beloved author and illustrator Roman Muradov weaves together the words and stories of artists, writers, philosophers, and eccentrics who have pursued inspiration by doing less. He reveals that doing nothing is both easily achievable and absolutely essential to leading an enjoyable and creative life. Cultivating idleness can be as simple as taking a long walk without a destination or embracing chance in the creative process. Peppered with playful illustrations, this handsome volume is a refreshing and thought-provoking read."

...

"Roman Muradov is an award-winning author and artist, and a professor at California College of the Arts in San Francisco."

[via:
https://www.scopeofwork.net/an-incomplete-accounting-of-what-im-reading/

quoting:

"Artistic delay is resisting the impulse to explore an idea fully at its birth, instead allowing it to live for a while in the greenhouse of the mind, where it may mature and corrupt, grow into something new, or die and fertilize the soil."]]]></description>
<dc:subject>idleness romanmuradov slow productivity optimization philosophy art writing eccentrics creativity walking</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6e7d2455d8c7/</dc:identifier>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/richard-louv/noticing/9781643753034/">
    <title>Noticing by Richard Louv | Hachette Book Group</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-27T05:38:59+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/richard-louv/noticing/9781643753034/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["The internationally bestselling author of Last Child in the Woods seeks a deeper personal connection to nature during this time of ecoanxiety and upheaval by exploring his own backyard.

Long beloved for his insightful, inspiring nature writing, Richard Louv returns with his most personal book yet. Noticing is about discovering who you are by exploring the natural world. Louv shows how, by tapping into the thirty or more human senses we have, readers can develop skills––sensory, scientific, artistic, and spiritual––to see and experience the otherworlds of nature. 

Through personal essays, rich with descriptions of the California wilderness around his home in the most biodiverse county in the nation, Louv draws on wisdom from influences as far-reaching as neuroscience, nature photography, Indigenous traditions, and mindfulness to foster what he calls “bioenchantment.” He offers a new, deeper understanding of what it means to see a tree, know a fox, and to become fully human."

[via: 

“How Humans Are Like Bloodhounds and Bats: A conversation with writer Richard Louv, who coined the term “nature deficit disorder””
https://nautil.us/how-humans-are-like-bloodhounds-and-bats-1282274 ]

"Richard Louv is a journalist and the author of ten books, including Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder, The Nature Principle, and Vitamin N. Translated into twenty languages, his books have helped launch an international movement to connect children, families, and communities to nature. He is cofounder and chair emeritus of the nonprofit Children & Nature Network, which supports a new nature movement. Louv has written for the New York Times, Outside magazine*, Orion Magazine, Parents,* and many other publications. He appears regularly on national radio and TV, and lectures throughout the world. In 2008, he was awarded the Audubon Medal. Prior recipients have included Rachel Carson, E. O. Wilson, President Jimmy Carter, and Sir David Attenborough."

***

“Richard Louv would like you to live a beautiful life. He wants you to see how easy, how free and freeing this can be. This book is a how-to manual for getting back your soul.” —Carl Safina, author of Alfie and Me: What Owls Know, What Humans Believe

“Richard Louv’s Noticing isn’t nature writing as usual, it’s an invitation to meet the more-than-human world through all the senses. Drawing on research, mindfulness practices, Indigenous wisdom, and intimate encounters in the biodiverse California wilderness, Louv shows us that there’s far more to the outdoors than what meets the eye. The result is a beautiful ode to wonder—and a reminder that our capacity for enchantment is a skill we can relearn.” —Linda Åkeson McGurk, author of The Open-Air Life and There’s No Such Thing as Bad Weather

"Richard Louv has created a ‘multi-being’ in the form of a book illustrating, all the senses needed to fully attend to this wonderful, divergent world. No single species can do this, but Noticing, filled with Richard’s observations and the sensory insights of many others, human and nonhuman, is as close as you are ever going to get." —Glenn Albrecht, author of Earth Emotions

“Richard Louv is one of today’s most discerning observers of the natural world and our place in it, and Noticing is his most personal and intimate book yet. It is full of grace and full of wonder. A beautiful guide to being present, reconnecting, caring, healing, and thriving.” —Howard Frumkin, Former Director of CDC National Center for Environmental Health

“Blending rich storytelling with research and ancestral ways of knowing, Louv shows how deep noticing can reawaken our senses and renew our bond with nature. This inspiring book reminds us that when we slow down and observe with care, the world becomes more alive—and so do we.” —Sally Jewell, Former U.S. Secretary of the Interior

“What a gift! And so needed. Rich Louv’s Noticing is simultaneously informative and inspiring, uplifting and grounded. Reading his words, I found myself laughing out loud at times. Moments later, I was on the verge of tears. With humor and heart, scholarship and practicality, Rich provides a path forward for healing human relationships with the rest of nature.” —Cheryl Charles, Ph.D., International Co-Chair of IUCN’s NatureForAll and Co-Founder of Children & Nature Network

“[Louv] moves back and forth from lyrical descriptions of connection to nature to impassioned concern about the future of the planet to a certain mild skepticism toward those who believe they are empowered to speak for nature…His thoughtful, encouraging approach makes it easy for readers to follow in his footsteps. A gentle guide to connecting with the non-human world.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Richard Louv’s book is like a gentle prescription for our times—an invitation not just to go outside, but to truly step into nature with intention and attention. Through reflective storytelling and practical guidance, he encourages readers to engage all their senses, notice more deeply, and cultivate a richer connection with the natural world, themselves, and one another. In doing so, he offers a simple yet profound path to nurturing ourselves and hope for the future.” —Pooja Tandon M.D., MPH, Professor of General Pediatrics, Seattle Children's Hospital

“Nature writer extraordinaire…Louv does not restate the obvious about nature’s wonders; instead, he asserts how significant contact with nature can be as we embrace computer screens, AI, and ever-increasing reality distortion…Not self-help and yet enormously helpful, *Noticing…*encourages readers to reflect on nature beyond what can be seen with the naked eye…Thoughtful, timely, and achingly beautiful, this is a book to savor." —Colleen Mondor, Booklist"]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/06/lenka-clayton-art-21-film/">
    <title>Lenka Clayton Reflects on Motherhood and Finding Connection in Everyday Objects — Colossal</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-26T08:37:27+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/06/lenka-clayton-art-21-film/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["To open a new film from Art21, artist Lenka Clayton encapsulates her way of thinking and making: “Looking at things that are supposed to behave a certain way and purposefully misunderstanding how they should be used, it’s really important to me,” she says.

The Cornwall-born artist works across media, creating both meditative animations via typewriter and immersive installations of gathered artifacts. Collecting is central to Clayton’s practice both materially and conceptually, and she often works from her own experiences, particularly those around becoming a parent and her life in Pittsburgh (she even started an open-source residency program for artist mothers).

[video embed:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olyBoqfEPGY ]

In the short documentary, we see Clayton’s culinary installation of colorful tongs hung in a grid on her studio wall alongside a project completed when her son was a baby. Each time she retrieved a spool of thread, button, acorn, bottle cap, or myriad other object from her child’s mouth, she documented the tiny finding and created an enormous, photographic grid that speaks to the care required to protect young life.

“There is only connection in life,” she says, “and my work is just looking at those connections, so that we can create a shared experience.”

This segment is part of Art21’s Human Nature episode, alongside Colombian artist Delcy Morelos, and both are available for viewing on Art21’s website. Find more from Clayton on Instagram."]]></description>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://placesjournal.org/article/museums-and-megastructures-lucas-academy-lacma-los-angeles/?cn-reloaded=1">
    <title>Museums and Megastructures</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-25T08:56:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://placesjournal.org/article/museums-and-megastructures-lucas-academy-lacma-los-angeles/?cn-reloaded=1</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["A trio of new museums in Los Angeles hovers between architecture and urbanism, and between art and entertainment."]]></description>
<dc:subject>losangeles museums architecture art entertainment urbanism joeday lacma academymuseumofmotionpictures lucasmuseum lucasmuseumofnarrativeart academymuseum geffengalleries gettycenter moca hammermuseum broadmuseum peterzumthor clementgreenberg renzopiano mayansong mad frankgehry disneyconcerthall zahahadid aliyevcenter expositionpark wilshireboulevard sanaa reynerbanham kunsthaus graz petercook colinfournier archigram remkoolhaas davidgeffen georgelucas publicspace mikedavis 2026</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.jerrysmap.com/">
    <title>Jerry's Map</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-24T07:41:46+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.jerrysmap.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[[See also:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Gretzinger
https://www.youtube.com/@jerrygretzinger9861/videos
https://vimeo.com/user2352465

https://www.itsnicethat.com/articles/jerrys-map
https://www.wired.com/2013/09/jerry-gretzinger-map-ukrania/
https://www.theatlantic.com/video/2011/09/the-mysterious-life-of-jerrys-map/469446/
https://art.org/exhibitions/jerrys-map

https://vimeo.com/6745866
https://vimeo.com/13596774

"#9 - Jerry Gretzinger" (The Story Podcast)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZthLRfCsMA

"He Won’t Stop Building a Map to an Imaginary Place"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Is8N7B9b0GQ

"The remarkable story of Jerry Gretzinger and the map he's dedicated his life to making.

00:00 - What is Jerry's Map?
01:19 - How the map gets made
13:34 - Day 1: The build begins
20:14 - The deck of cards
24:55 - Day 2: We resemble prawns
35:45 - Day 3: The final panels
41:24 - Watch our companion video!"

via:
https://www.openculture.com/2026/06/this-man-has-been-drawing-a-map-of-an-imaginary-land-since-1963.html

"At one time or another, we all feel twinges of anxiety about what will constitute the legacy we leave behind. Jerry Gretzinger may well be subject to just the same discomfort, but at least he can point to the Map: an enormous representation, made of thousands and thousands of individually created and continually modified panels, of an entirely fictional land called Ukrania. You can see Jerry’s Map painstakingly laid out in its most up-to-date state in the new People Make Games video above. As interesting as the product is so far, the work that goes into it is just as compelling, which Gretzinger performs every day according to a complex and strictly defined set of procedures dictated by a deck of heavily modified playing cards.

It would take an astute listener to grasp the rules of the project the first time through, but they’re also available for supplementary study at the official site of Gretzinger’s map. They may bring to mind Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies, the deck of cards printed with suggestions meant to dislodge creative jams in the music studio or elsewhere.

The map itself may look more reminiscent of the work of Henry Darger, another “outsider artist” who produced riots of color and haphazard-looking materials with an obsessive underlying order of their own. But unlike Darger, who died in obscurity only for his askew epics to be discovered among his belongings, Gretzinger has become famous for his creation in his lifetime, so much so that there exists an active subreddit of amateurs following his example.

Still, the Map did first have to be rediscovered. What Gretzinger began as the expansion of idle doodles in urban form made during breaks at the ball bearing factory in 1963 had to be shelved in the eighties, when a clothing business he’d started with his wife took off. A couple of decades thereafter, his son’s discovery of the Map in the attic inspired Gretzinger to resume work on it, which has continued apace ever since. When interviewed, he sounds less like a creator than an observer, helplessly watching as the city of Ukrania becomes more abstract as it grows — and as great swathes are inexorably consumed by a white space, made of scraps of his own correspondence and other life artifacts, that he portentously calls “the Void.” Now that he’s in his mid-eighties, Gretzinger appears to find it all more freighted with meaning than ever. Sooner or later, alas the Void comes for us all; what’s left to us is how we prepare for it.]

"What is it?

In the summer of 1963 Jerry began drawing a map of an imaginary city. The work started as a doodle done in the spare time he had while working at a tedious job. He continued to add to that map through the years until, in 1983, he set it aside to put his free time to other use.

It was stored in the attic of his home in Cold Spring, New York. It gathered dust. Jerry’s son, Henry, found it one day while rummaging around. He brought it down and asked what it was. Seeing it then triggered Jerry to dust it off and continue the project.

Years later, the Map is now a two-dimensional “virtual world” art project which is now comprised of over 4000 individual eight by ten inch panels. When assembled, these panels form an approximate circle. The panel locations are defined by N, S, E, and W coordinates that originate at the center of the circle. The locations in the matrix do not change, but the panels themselves are continually revised based on instructions drawn from the artist’s custom deck of cards.

Its execution, in acrylic, marker, colored pencil, ink, collage, and inkjet print on heavy paper, is dictated by the interplay between an elaborate set of rules and randomly generated instructions.

Jerry maintained a blog about the project for many years. He no longer updates it, but the old posts are still available on Blogger. And also be sure to check out r/jerrymapping,  an interesting  subreddit devoted to map making in the style of Jerry's Map**.**

The Creative Process

The Card Deck

The entire process is driven by instructions on a card drawn from a special deck created by the artist. Each cycle begins only when the artist’s tasks from the previous card are complete. This could take anywhere from a few minutes to a few days.

The cards were first introduced as a simple random number generator. When Jerry was first creating the map it was simple enough to work sheet to sheet, but as the map grew to hundreds of individual panels it became very tedious to make his way through the set.

“I wanted to move through the stack faster, and the easiest random number system I could come up with was a deck of cards. I’d draw a card and move down that many panels in the stack.” 

As Jerry began working on ways of systematizing the process of working on the map he began to incorporate instructions on the cards. The contemporary deck of cards has been adapted from playing cards and the total number varies as cards have been added, revised, and removed. Currently there are approximately 100 cards.

“Sometimes I have feelings about the deck of cards. There’s a message in those cards. There’s no big man with a beard who has ordered the cards, but I’m very interested in seeing what comes out of it. There’s a reality in there waiting to get out. It’s the map’s future predictor and as it is always changing its alive…My hand puts the paint on the paper, I’ll step back and look at the sheets as though I wasn’t the perpetrator but merely the observer.”

The Principles

These are the instructions and rules which guide the Artist in the creation of the map:

• Each card has a large black or red number in an upper corner. A "task" is defined as the completion of the number of work units as specified by the number on the card that is drawn. A work unit is the number of one inch squares to be covered. The number drawn and the effort required can be highly variable, so a day's work could consist of one card’s work units, or just a portion of one. Work on an incomplete work unit continues at the next work session.
• When a card is drawn you must follow the specific instructions on the card, but those instructions may be changed for the next time that card is drawn.
• Work direction is determined by color of the drawn card - black is clockwise, red is counter-clockwise.
• Every page has a "center" point from which the work emanates. The "center" of the new page is the same as the parent’s.
• New panels are generated by drawing a "new panel" card, or a new panel is required to complete a section of art.
• When a new page is added, the new page will use the "color of the day".
• The location of the new page is determined by placing a compass point in the "center" of the parent page and determining the closest edge of the map (this keeps the map roughly circular and growing generally equally in all directions).
• Master map shows the locations of the panels as defined by coordinates.
• Colors are more abstract and do not necessarily represent the physical world. Colors may be applied with either paint or markers, or by using collage. The 42 colors are continually remixed to ensure a spectrum of paints.
• New artwork is never applied on top of existing original artwork, it is only added to a new version of the page.

The Layers

The Map is expressed, over time, in successive layers, each one replacing its predecessor. The process of developing and revising a panel results in several iterations of that panel.

The Base Layer is divided into four phases:

A. The blank page is an 8 by 10 inch patchwork of paperboard or is a sheet of heavy paper on which is a photo or a lumen print.

B. The blank is gradually covered in successive bands of painted color.

C. The paint is replaced by 1" squares of paper collage.

D. The collage is replaced by 1" city squares in:
1. Green with 400 new inhabitants
2. Red with 800 new inhabitants
3. Grey with 1200 new inhabitants
4. Black with 2400 new inhabitants

The next layer is The Void. Its initial phase is composed of irregular pieces of plain, white collage. That is followed by a layer of 2" squares of black-and-white collage. On that layer 1" squares of grey city form followed by 1" squares of black city.

The third layer is called The Red Dimension and is expressed by irregular flame-shaped solid red collage.

Black Ness, composed of 2" squares of black collage, supercedes The Red Dimension.

Then follows The Ziggurat Phase in which successively smaller squares of collage, starting with 2 by 2, are stacked on top of each other. That layer, and the ones that follow, have yet to manifest themselves on The Map.

The Flood, represented by irregular pieces of blue collage, and Re-Birth, composed of hand-torn pieces of kraft paper, are the final stages in the Map cycle.

Then the whole process starts over with new Paint Bands.

The Evolution of the Process

The map has been constantly evolving with Jerry over the years from the earliest iterations to its present state. This evolution has been driven by three primary factors. First, the media used in the production of the map panels has changed over time. Second, as the map grew larger mechanisms such as the use of the deck of instruction cards automated the map and changed Jerry's role as the author. Finally, the introduction of the system of layers."]]></description>
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    <title>He Won’t Stop Building a Map to an Imaginary Place - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-24T07:40:50+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Is8N7B9b0GQ</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["The remarkable story of Jerry Gretzinger and the map he's dedicated his life to making.

00:00 - What is Jerry's Map?
01:19 - How the map gets made
13:34 - Day 1: The build begins
20:14 - The deck of cards
24:55 - Day 2: We resemble prawns
35:45 - Day 3: The final panels
41:24 - Watch our companion video!"

[See also: 

https://www.jerrysmap.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Gretzinger
https://www.youtube.com/@jerrygretzinger9861/videos
https://vimeo.com/user2352465

https://www.itsnicethat.com/articles/jerrys-map
https://www.wired.com/2013/09/jerry-gretzinger-map-ukrania/
https://www.theatlantic.com/video/2011/09/the-mysterious-life-of-jerrys-map/469446/
https://art.org/exhibitions/jerrys-map

https://vimeo.com/6745866
https://vimeo.com/13596774

"#9 - Jerry Gretzinger" (The Story Podcast)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZthLRfCsMA

via:
https://www.openculture.com/2026/06/this-man-has-been-drawing-a-map-of-an-imaginary-land-since-1963.html

"At one time or another, we all feel twinges of anxiety about what will constitute the legacy we leave behind. Jerry Gretzinger may well be subject to just the same discomfort, but at least he can point to the Map: an enormous representation, made of thousands and thousands of individually created and continually modified panels, of an entirely fictional land called Ukrania. You can see Jerry’s Map painstakingly laid out in its most up-to-date state in the new People Make Games video above. As interesting as the product is so far, the work that goes into it is just as compelling, which Gretzinger performs every day according to a complex and strictly defined set of procedures dictated by a deck of heavily modified playing cards.

It would take an astute listener to grasp the rules of the project the first time through, but they’re also available for supplementary study at the official site of Gretzinger’s map. They may bring to mind Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies, the deck of cards printed with suggestions meant to dislodge creative jams in the music studio or elsewhere.

The map itself may look more reminiscent of the work of Henry Darger, another “outsider artist” who produced riots of color and haphazard-looking materials with an obsessive underlying order of their own. But unlike Darger, who died in obscurity only for his askew epics to be discovered among his belongings, Gretzinger has become famous for his creation in his lifetime, so much so that there exists an active subreddit of amateurs following his example.

Still, the Map did first have to be rediscovered. What Gretzinger began as the expansion of idle doodles in urban form made during breaks at the ball bearing factory in 1963 had to be shelved in the eighties, when a clothing business he’d started with his wife took off. A couple of decades thereafter, his son’s discovery of the Map in the attic inspired Gretzinger to resume work on it, which has continued apace ever since. When interviewed, he sounds less like a creator than an observer, helplessly watching as the city of Ukrania becomes more abstract as it grows — and as great swathes are inexorably consumed by a white space, made of scraps of his own correspondence and other life artifacts, that he portentously calls “the Void.” Now that he’s in his mid-eighties, Gretzinger appears to find it all more freighted with meaning than ever. Sooner or later, alas the Void comes for us all; what’s left to us is how we prepare for it."]]]></description>
<dc:subject>jerrygretzinger maps mapping fiction obliquestrategies 2026 art brianeno henrydarger making imagination creativity rules systems systemsthinking games play gaming worldbuilding arts accretion persistence peoplemakegames lore change random randomness uncertainty unrest future disorder order cards carddecks productivity generativeart generative</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/amy-sheralds-sacred-monuments">
    <title>Amy Sherald’s Sacred Monuments | Commonweal Magazine</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-21T04:00:25+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/amy-sheralds-sacred-monuments</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Black portraiture in an iconoclastic age"]]></description>
<dc:subject>2025 aaronrobertson portraits portraiture art culture race arts otiskwamekyequaicoe barkleyhendricks tituskaphar markdoox kateegawa oasaduverney shrineoftheblackmadonna detroit religion spirituality hughielee-smith sonyamassey tamirrice philandocastile georgefloyd sandrabland elizabethalexander trayvonmartin angelamiller alanwallach hudsonriverschool blacklivesmatter jordancasteel henrytaylor jenniferpacker tylermitchell ninachanelabney michelleobama peterschjeldahl ta-nehisicoates amysherald</dc:subject>
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<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:d0f09da3fec2/</dc:identifier>
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<item rdf:about="https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/paulo-nazareth-kabila-kyowa-stephane-on-walking/id1798973926?i=1000767135818&amp;l=en-GB">
    <title>Paulo Nazareth &amp; Stéphane Kabila Kyowa on Walking – Space Between – Apple Podcasts</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-12T21:51:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/paulo-nazareth-kabila-kyowa-stephane-on-walking/id1798973926?i=1000767135818&amp;l=en-GB</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["In this episode, we pair artist Paulo Nazareth with curator Kabila Kyowa Stéphane to explore walking as both an ancestral practice and a political act, tracing questions of mobility, borders, and belonging. Paulo Nazareth is an artist whose work engages deeply with colonial histories through movement, land, and memory. Kabila Kyowa Stéphane is an artist and thinker whose practice reflects on the politics of access, restriction, and human experience across borders."

[https://www.koozarch.com/podcasts/space-between-podcast ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>walking paulonazareth resistance movement belonging boders memory 2026 kabilakyowastéphane access restriction humanexperience mobility borders land memeory indigeneity indigenous practice politics art</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://aeon.co/videos/when-artworks-dare-audiences-to-break-a-cardinal-museum-rule">
    <title>When art dares us to break a cardinal museum rule | Aeon Videos</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-12T09:33:22+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://aeon.co/videos/when-artworks-dare-audiences-to-break-a-cardinal-museum-rule</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["One of the cardinal rules of museum-going is that art should be enjoyed from a comfortable distance and never touched. However, in the 1960s, a cohort of artists began inviting audiences to interact with, and thus alter, their works. This included the Japanese artist Yoko Ono, whose Painting to Be Stepped On (1960-61) was, as the title explicitly states, designed to be trampled.

In this instalment of the Art and the Senses short documentary series from the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City, which interrogates how we encounter art beyond sight, Ono’s participatory piece becomes a lens through which to explore the inherent tension between artists, museums and audiences when touch is invited. Featuring interviews with museum curators and scenes from MoMA’s long-running touch tours, where educators guide visitors with visual impairments through works by feel, the film prompts viewers to consider: if art is a form of communication, what does touch allow us to say to one another?"

[direct link to video:

"“Don’t Touch the Art?” How Yoko Ono Challenged a Museum Taboo"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-4o_syR3Ew

"Of all the senses, touch is the biggest taboo in a museum. But what if allowing touch is the only way to truly experience the work?

In our latest episode of Art and the Senses, we follow two stories. The first shows how Yoko Ono challenged the rules of art in her "Painting to Be Stepped On" (1960), a piece of canvas laid on the floor, asking viewers to touch it. The second takes us on a “touch tour,” a long-running Access program at MoMA in which educators lead visitors who are blind or have low vision through the galleries to experience works through touch, a sense that shapes perception, memory, and emotional connection.

Hear from Ono, John Lennon, curators, conservators, artists, and museum educators as they explore one of the most powerful and charged senses. As Connor Monahan, Ono’s studio director says, “Touch is something that creates connection, and connection creates communication, and communication is what people need to create peace.”"]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/the-same-stream-twice/">
    <title>The Same Stream Twice | Online Only | n+1 | Rob Arcand</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-12T01:48:51+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/the-same-stream-twice/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Cultural products are more than ever a class of financialized assets, whose owners are even further removed from artmaking"

...

"It can be difficult to see what purpose cultural criticism serves in a moment of such rapid change for the culture industries. If “derivative media” is the reigning spirit of our times, saturated with shoddy reboots and padded with robotic background music, is there still any reason to engage with these works as critics? We might follow the example of Horkheimer and Adorno, who simply rejected Hollywood, Tin Pan Alley, jazz, and other mass cultural products as mere instruments of capitalist domination; yet their mandarin Marxism feels retrograde in a time when the boundaries of high and low taste are far less sharply drawn. In their own ways, Pelly and deWaard both suggest paths forward for criticism, drawn from their engagements with political economy.

In Pelly’s account, streaming as a medium is inseparable from the economic forces that have made it ubiquitous in everyday life, and to be an effective critic today requires close engagement with these economic factors. A kind of vernacular historical materialism underlies her premise that the musical styles of Billie Eilish or Post Malone emanate from the financialized, algorithmically conditioned environment of streaming itself, as well as deWaard’s ruthlessly symptomatic readings of 30 Rock and Space Jam. From there, both turn to critique the funding structures and production process that form the connective tissue between these economic and aesthetic categories. The critic of derivative media must be no less fluent in the language of boardrooms and earnings calls than that of sitcom dialogue or rap lyrics.

The spirit of Fredric Jameson looms over such work. Knowingly or not, both Pelly and deWaard engage questions that the late Marxist critic put forward decades ago. In The Political Unconscious (1981), Jameson suggests that Marxist literary criticism needs modes of interpretation that are able to mediate between the formal features of artistic works and the economic conditions of their production, without reducing them to simplistic economic narratives or descriptions of aesthetic inspiration uncoupled from material conditions. This “allegorical” approach to critique propelled much of his subsequent work, including his 1991 masterpiece Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, with its famous readings of the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Andy Warhol’s pop paintings, and nostalgia films like American Graffiti.

The irony of aesthetic life under capitalism, as Jameson also reminded us, has always been that even the most debased cultural products contain, albeit in ideologically distorted forms, the promise of a way of life liberated from the instrumentalizing, commodifying drives of capital. If the cultural logic of finance capital—with its degraded platforms, securitized song catalogs, and “derivative media”—is the terrain that the critic must inhabit, then it represents a shared site of struggle with workers from across the music, film, and television industries. It is in this contested landscape where the future of the culture industries will be decided."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1-hhZUcGJY">
    <title>Trauma is a Time Machine: A Cinematic Primer with Kwasu D. Tembo - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-08T05:32:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1-hhZUcGJY</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["If you could go back in time, would you change the past, even if it meant changing who you are? Is existing in time itself traumatic? Is power over time a cinematic endeavour, and what makes a good director an even better time traveller? This week on Acid Horizon we're joined by Kwasu D. Tembo to talk about his latest book Trauma in 21st-Century Time Travel Cinema, discussing the philosophy of time travel in films such as Primer, Timecrimes, and Predestination; as well as how the experience of time transcendentally conditions the structure of the psyche.

Buy Baz's book, Trauma in 21st-Century Time Travel Cinema
Being (a)Part: https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/trauma-in-21stcentury-time-travel-cinema-9781978768734/

<blockquote>Kwasu D. Tembo unites approaches from disciplines as wide-ranging as physics, mathematics, cinema, philosophy, and media theory to pose critical questions concerning time, change, and (un)becoming in contemporary time-travel cinema.

In his analyses of 21st-century cinematic time-travel narratives, Tembo situates human life in time as a palimpsest, with time acting as scriptor and stylus. A time machine, then, functions as a fantasy that allows for this pace to be slowed or accelerated so as to appear entirely suspended, with the potentials of the “Now” (re)opened to the traveler.

As the manipulation of time lends the traveler increased agency-and perhaps the conditions to see themselves more clearly amid a claustrophobic sea of information and content-Tembo contends that we must carefully consider the psycho-emotional affectivity of both the motivations and the potentially traumatic consequences of such a jarring shift in perspective. The results lend critical insight into human understandings of how we experience time and, ultimately, what these understandings permit and disallow in terms of how (it is) to be in time.</blockquote>

Phasmid Press: https://phasmidpress.org/ "]]></description>
<dc:subject>timetravel film fiction sciencefiction scifi trauma acidhorizon 2026 kwasutembo philosophy death temporality therapy experience healing lajetée chrismarker agency freewill determinism nihilism physics filmtheory value chronomics responsibility capitalism longnow accelerationism charlesdickens now present labor work nostalgia backtothefuture gillesdeleuze deleuze robertasparrow donnydarko enternalsunsetofthespotlessmind twelevemonkeys coherence inception interstellar primer runlolarun upstreamcolor horsegirl looper minorityreport mrnobody thejacket momento anotherearth predestination meetcute everythingeverywhereallatonce thebeast projectalmanac timecrimes timelapse safetynotguaranteed darkcity tenet sourcecode itfollows chronologicaltime continuities continuity discretion memory change individualism choice improvisation contingency disruption looping quantumphysics stephenwolfram loops repetion complexity luddism neoluddism evolution henribergson andreasmalm wimcarton future entropy computing computation g</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/05/defining-humanity/">
    <title>Pluralistic: Refining humanity (05 Jun 2026) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-07T00:57:07+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/05/defining-humanity/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["One of the best ways to evaluate your own understanding of a subject is to attempt to explain it to someone else. Through explaining things, we discover how much of the "totally obvious" world is actually full of ambiguity, mystery and contradiction.

There's a great bit in Rowan Atkinson's historical sitcom Blackadder that illustrates this principle. In "Ink and Incapability" Blackadder and friends have accidentally burned the only copy of Samuel Johnson's original dictionary of the English language. To cover up their mistake, they decide that they will recreate the dictionary themselves. However, they founder on the first word they try to define, "A":

<blockquote>Blackadder: Let's start at the beginning, shall we? First: 'A.' How would you define 'A'?

    Prince George: Ohh…'A' (continues this in background). Oh, I love this! I love this! Quizzies! Erm, hang on, it’s coming. Ooh, crikey, erm, oh yes, I’ve got it!

    B: What?

    PG: Well, it doesn’t really mean anything, does it?

    B: Good. So we're well on the way, then. "'A'; impersonal pronoun; doesn't really mean anything."</blockquote>

I mean, what does "A" mean? The Oxford English Dictionary has more than a dozen definitions, and just the first one runs to more than 1,500 words:

https://archive.org/details/the-oxford-english-dictionary-all-volumes_202208/The%20Oxford%20English%20Dictionary%20Volume%201%20-%20A%20to%20B/page/n25/mode/2up

Now, normal life involves a lot of explaining things to other people. You have to explain your problems to customer service reps, who have to explain why they can't solve those problems to you. You need to explain to your loved ones why you want to leave your toothbrush in the shower, and they have to explain why they hate having your toothbrush in the shower. These explanation-exchanges teach you as much as they teach the person you're locked in dialog with. The reasons for leaving your toothbrush in the shower may seem totally obvious to you, and your partner's inability to understand this reveals the assumptions you've never even considered.

For the past four decades, an increasing proportion of the population have spent an increasing proportion of their lives explaining things to machines that have no assumptions or shared context: computers. What we call "programming a computer" is really "breaking down a thing that seems obvious to you into increasingly simple instructions that will be followed to the letter."

Computers are like the genies of legend, bloody-minded literalists who will do exactly what you say, in the way that is perversely furthest from what you mean. To get a computer to do anything, you must first understand it to a degree that far exceeds the understanding needed to explain something to any other human, even a small child.

To take just one example: yesterday, I was on a plane, and the seatback video started cycling through its video-on-demand offerings. All of the movie titles that began with "the" were rewritten to put "the" at the end of the title (for example, "The Sting" was written as "Sting, The"). It's obvious why the system's designer had done this: we expect to find movies whose titles begin with "The" alphabetized under their second word ("The Sting" should appear between "Star Wars" and "Story of a Love Affair"; not between "The Godfather" and "The Untouchables").

I remember when I learned this from my elementary school's teacher-librarian, when I was seven and my class got a tutorial on the school library's card catalog. The librarian explained this principle to us in a matter of minutes, as part of a longer set of instructions, and still, it stuck with me forever.

But here we are, 48 years later, and we still haven't standardized a way to get computers to grasp this foundational principle of alphabetization. Many different databases handle this, to be sure, but it's so inconsistent across so many platforms that someone at the head-end of the video distribution system that feeds American Airlines' VOD system decided, "Fuck it, I'm just gonna put the 'The' at the end of these titles."

Computers are stupid, in other words, which means that the people who program them have to have smarts enough for both of them. Unfortunately for our entire species and civilization, the software industry has historically valued skill at writing efficient and reliable software over writing software that adequately reflects reality. There is an entire genre of lists that illustrate the problem with this; the "falsehoods programmers believe" lists:

https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood

From "names of people" and "street addresses"; from "prices" to "time"; from "email addresses" to "phone numbers"; the "awesome falsehoods" lists are awesome because they reveal how much subtlety and complexity is lurking in these seemingly simple and intuitive concepts. This subtlety and complexity might never emerge through the process of trying to teach a person about them, but when you try to teach a computer about them, you have to confront them in all their awesome fuggliness.

That's because humans have context, agency and flexibility. Sure, the person who designs a form with a blank for "name" might never have met a Malagasy person whose first name is Randriamananjararadofabesata, but in the pre-digital world, when Madagascar Slim met a public official who had to transcribe his name onto a paper form, that official could simply draw an arrow in the margin next to the "name" blank, turn the form over, and write out all 28 characters on the reverse:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madagascar_Slim

Computers can't do this. If the programmer doesn't know about Malagasy first names, the computer doesn't know about them either, and the only person who can "teach" the computer about these names is a programmer with access to the code for the database, who has to manually alter the code, compile it, and distribute it to everyone who uses it.

This is partly why digitization has been accompanied by a rise in people asserting that they exist on spectrums rather than in binaries. There were always people whose names, genders, races, and other biographic "immutables" changed, or failed to fit within the blanks on the forms. When those people's realities ran up against failures in the system's abstractions, they could petition a bureaucrat to turn the paper over and write an explanatory note, or to write really small to fill in a blank:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/02/nonbinary-families/#red-envelopes

Getting a human official to turn the paper over and write something that didn't fit in the blank is a personal challenge. It requires that a subject convince the person who controls the form to make an exception. This isn't always easy, but officials on the front lines necessarily deal with reality, and they can't get their jobs done unless they're capable of interpreting the necessarily incomplete procedures they operate under to fit things as they really are.

But a computer doesn't have any agency or context or flexibility. If the computer says your name isn't valid, you can't argue the computer into accepting it. The only way to get a digital world to acknowledge your existence is to campaign for systemic change. A trans person might (with great difficulty, to be sure) convince the regional registrar to white-out an old X on one "gender" box and mark a new X in the other box. But the only way to make that change in a software system that has been programmed to treat the "gender" field as immutable is to change society itself.

In this way, computers are machines for teaching us what we don't know about ourselves. They require that we interrogate and faithfully recreate our personal tacit knowledge, and they require that our societies interrogate their tacit presumptions as well. When you are forced to turn your tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge, you're also forced to confront how many broken assumptions lurk inside your reasoning. At best, it's a clarifying process.

Computers don't just clarify what we know and how we organize our society: they also clarify what we are. There are lots of things that we have supposed that a computer would never do, because we believed that these things required something that only humans could do.

Take chess: there are more possible chess games than there are hydrogen atoms in the universe, so brute-forcing chess by running all possible games is a technological impossibility. The best human chess players do something we don't quite understand, mixing their recollections of previous games with rules-of-thumb about the best strategies, with "creativity" (whatever that is) that lets them spontaneously develop new strategies. We can easily get a computer to memorize all the known-good chess sequences and all the rules of thumb, but we don't know what "creativity" is, so we can't encode it as a series of instructions.

But thanks to breakthroughs in machine learning and its successor, "deep learning," we have created chess-playing software that can beat every human, partly by assaying gambits that we would term "creative" if they originated with a human player.

What we make of this new fact is controversial. For many people (myself included), this is a refinement: it tells me that behaviors that are indistinguishable from "creativity" can, at least some of the time, be created by mechanical processes, and the mere fact that a machine does something that appears "creative" doesn't mean that machines are human.

For others, the fact that a mechanical system can evince a behavior that we would call "creative" in a human doesn't mean that we defined "creativity" too broadly, it means that we defined "human" too narrowly, and now we have made a machine that is, at least partially, a person.

I think this is the wrong conclusion to draw, for reasons that Ted Chiang sets out with luminous brilliance in a recent Atlantic article entitled "No, Artificial Intelligence Is Not Conscious":

https://www.theatlantic.com/philosophy/2026/06/no-artificial-intelligence-is-not-conscious/687378/

(If you're hitting the paywall on that one and you're on Firefox, you can try my favorite trick: switch to "Reader Mode" and hit "reload" – your mileage may vary.)

For all the reasons Chiang articulates, I think that drawing the "personhood" line to include machines is a technical mistake, but it's worse than that. Admitting machines to the "personhood" club is a tactical mistake, on par with the mistake we made when we admitted corporations to the personhood club. We should absolutely consider expanding personhood to incorporate living things, including animals and ecosystems, but at the same time, we must purge these dead, artificial constructs from the club:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/15/artificial-lifeforms/#moral-consideration

There is a way in which the recognition of new capabilities in machines parallels the recognition of new capabilities in animals other than ourselves. When those animals manage to do things that we once thought were the exclusive province of humans, we (should) take that as an opportunity to refine our conception of humanity. We're not "the animals that use tools" or "the animals that make plans" or "the animals that recognize themselves in mirrors," because there are other animals that do those things. We are an "animal that uses tools"; not the animal that does so.

Likewise, if we thought that some activity was unique to humans, or to living beings, and we manage to get a machine to replicate that activity, we should revise our view of the activity – not our view of the machine. Creative breakthroughs in chess are not "a thing that requires a human mind," they're "things that can be done by human minds and by machines."

Edsger Dijkstra once famously asked "can a submarine swim?"

https://www.cs.utexas.edu/~EWD/transcriptions/EWD08xx/EWD898.html

Submarines and fish and humans and dolphins all propel themselves through water by different means. But when an animal swims, it does something that is different from what a submarine does. The submarine has no intention, while (complex multicellular) animals swim to pursue goals. Building machines that propel themselves through water is very useful, but it's not the same thing as creating life. In some ways, it's better than creating life: for one thing, we owe other living things moral consideration that is not due to machines. Harnessing a machine to accomplish our own goals is more morally clear than controlling living things to achieve those goals. By the same token, creating machines that can do some of the tasks that we ask of other humans can be the superior moral course. I'd rather have a machine remove mines from a minefield than getting humans to do it.

But beyond this moral relief, creating machines is a fantastic way to learn more about ourselves – making explicit our tacit knowledge, our implicit social assumptions, and the limitations of our conception of what sets us apart from the rest of the universe.

One way in which AI is exceptional is in how it undermines this principle. Conventional software techniques struggled to produce a program that could identify objects in photographs. It turns out that defining all the visual correlates of "cat" is even harder than defining the letter "A." Deep learning techniques solved this previous insoluble problem by relieving us of the job of making explicit all the implicit factors that we deploy when distinguishing an image of a "cat" from an image of a "dog" or a "tiger" (or a "tractor").

Instead of forcing humans to engage in introspection until we'd made a list of every factor we use to identify cat pictures, we simply identified pictures of cats and fed them to a program that tried to find the commonalities among them. The more pictures we fed to that program, the better it got at identifying cats. Today, we have programs that can reliably distinguish an image of a cat from an image of a tiger cub!

This represents a major breakthrough in the power of computers to perform useful work for us, but it's also a huge regression in computers' role in forcing us to make our tacit thought processes explicit through systematic introspection. That's probably fine: we didn't create computers to make us introspect, we created them to do useful work for us. All things considered, it might be better to have genies who grant our wishes according to the spirit of our words, not their letter.

AI may not force us to render our implicit thoughts as explicit instructions, but it absolutely forces us to reconsider and narrow the realm of the numinous. Our own creativity is still delightful and important, but the fact that this squishy, amazing process can (sometimes) be replicated by procedural machines changes the definition of living things. We're "a thing that can produce creative outcomes" but not "the things that can produce creative outcomes." The machines aren't being creative (any more than a submarine is swimming) but they're outputting things that we used to only achieve by means of creativity.

An AI that does something that used to require creativity is fulfilling my favorite of Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt's Oblique Strategies: "Be the first person to not do something that no one else has not done before":

https://stoney.sb.org/eno/oblique.html

Just as bosses fantasize about AI bringing about a worksite without workers, and Zuckerberg is trying to build social media without socializing, and politicians want a bureaucracy without bureaucrats, we can sometimes use AI to produce creative outcomes without creativity:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/05/27/unnecessariat/#rubbuts-stole-my-jerb

That isn't to say that AI art is any good. AI may produce things that are aesthetically interesting, but it can't produce things that mean anything:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/02/must-we-pretend/

But art isn't the only realm that we apply creativity to. There are plenty of outcomes that we've always believed we couldn't bring about without applying creativity. AI – like all software – is making us realize that an ingredient we once deemed uniquely essential turns out to have substitutes. AI can sometimes accomplish things without us explaining how we do them. That relieves us of a useful but difficult chore – but in so doing, it forces us (yet again!) to revisit what sorts of things are needed to do the things that matter to us, and therefore, what makes us special."]]></description>
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    <title>A Defense of Humanity in the Age of AI - The Atlantic</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-06T10:57:50+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/07/generative-ai-human-culture-philosophy/674165/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["The Coming Humanist Renaissance

We need a cultural and philosophical movement to meet the rise of artificial superintelligence."

[archived:
https://archive.is/Ql35H ]

"Writers of fiction—Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Rod Serling, José Saramago—have for generations warned of doppelgängers that might sap our humanity by stealing a person’s likeness. Our new world is a wormhole to that uncanny valley.

Whereas the first algorithmic revolution involved using people’s personal data to reorder the world for them, the next will involve our personal data being used not just to splinter our shared sense of reality, but to invent synthetic replicas. The profit-minded music-studio exec will thrill to the notion of an AI-generated voice with AI-generated songs, not attached to a human with intellectual-property rights. Artists, writers, and musicians should anticipate widespread impostor efforts and fight against them. So should all of us. One computer scientist recently told me she’s planning to create a secret code word that only she and her elderly parents know, so that if they ever hear her voice on the other end of the phone pleading for help or money, they’ll know whether it’s been generated by an AI trained on her publicly available lectures to sound exactly like her and scam them.

Today’s elementary-school children are already learning not to trust that anything they see or hear through a screen is real. But they deserve a modern technological and informational environment built on Enlightenment values: reason, human autonomy, and the respectful exchange of ideas. Not everything should be recorded or shared; there is individual freedom in embracing ephemerality. More human interactions should take place only between the people involved; privacy is key to preserving our humanity.

Finally, a more existential consideration requires our attention, and that is the degree to which the pursuit of knowledge orients us inward or outward. The artificial intelligence of the near future will supercharge our empirical abilities, but it may also dampen our curiosity. We are at risk of becoming so enamored of the synthetic worlds that we create—all data sets, duplicates, and feedback loops—that we cease to peer into the unknown with any degree of true wonder or originality.

We should trust human ingenuity and creative intuition, and resist overreliance on tools that dull the wisdom of our own aesthetics and intellect. Emerson once wrote that Isaac Newton “used the same wit to weigh the moon that he used to buckle his shoes.” Newton, I’ll point out, also used that wit to invent a reflecting telescope, the beginnings of a powerful technology that has allowed humankind to squint at the origins of the universe. But the spirit of Emerson’s idea remains crucial: Observing the world, taking it in using our senses, is an essential exercise on the path to knowledge. We can and should layer on technological tools that will aid us in this endeavor, but never at the expense of seeing, feeling, and ultimately knowing for ourselves.

A future in which overconfident machines seem to hold the answers to all of life’s cosmic questions is not only dangerously misguided, but takes away that which makes us human. In an age of anger, and snap reactions, and seemingly all-knowing AI, we should put more emphasis on contemplation as a way of being. We should embrace an unfinished state of thinking, the constant work of challenging our preconceived notions, seeking out those with whom we disagree, and sometimes still not knowing. We are mortal beings, driven to know more than we ever will or ever can.

The passage of time has the capacity to erase human knowledge: Whole languages disappear; explorers lose their feel for crossing the oceans by gazing at the stars. Technology continually reshapes our intellectual capacities. What remains is the fact that we are on this planet to seek knowledge, truth, and beauty—and that we only get so much time to do it.

As a small child in Concord, Massachusetts, I could see Emerson’s home from my bedroom window. Recently, I went back for a visit. Emerson’s house has always captured my imagination. He lived there for 47 years until his death, in 1882. Today, it is maintained by his descendants and a small staff dedicated to his legacy. The house is some 200 years old, and shows its age in creaks and stains. But it also possesses a quality that is extraordinarily rare for a structure of such historic importance: 141 years after his death, Emerson’s house still feels like his. His books are on the shelves. One of his hats hangs on a hook by the door. The original William Morris wallpaper is bright green in the carriage entryway. A rendering of Francesco Salviati’s The Three Fates, holding the thread of destiny, stands watch over the mantel in his study. This is the room in which Emerson wrote Nature. The table where he sat to write it is still there, next to the fireplace.

Standing in Emerson’s study, I thought about how no technology is as good as going to the place, whatever the destination. No book, no photograph, no television broadcast, no tweet, no meme, no augmented reality, no hologram, no AI-generated blueprint or fever dream can replace what we as humans experience. This is why you make the trip, you cross the ocean, you watch the sunset, you hear the crickets, you notice the phase of the moon. It is why you touch the arm of the person beside you as you laugh. And it is why you stand in awe at the Jardin des Plantes, floored by the universe as it reveals its hidden code to you."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://dougald.substack.com/p/making-special-making-scarce">
    <title>Making Special ≠ Making Scarce - by Dougald Hine</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-06T05:00:25+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://dougald.substack.com/p/making-special-making-scarce</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Thinking with Ellen Dissanayake about art and being human"

...

"Ten days ago, I sent off the manuscript of the new book to my publisher. As the season of writing and revising came to an end, Anna and I moved into hosting our first online series in over a year. Over five weeks, we have 180 participants from multiple continents, the youngest in their teens and the oldest in their nineties, gathering in larger and smaller groups around the theme of “practice”. In their company I get to chew some more on questions I’ve been writing about.

One thread that links the book and the series is Ellen Dissanayake’s work on art as behaviour. Dissanayake has dedicated a lifetime to studying the arts through an evolutionary lens as a distinctive behaviour of the human animal. It’s one of those cases where someone makes no attempt to build an academic career, but simply follows a hunch over decades, creating a body of work that runs at a strange angle to any established discipline. And although I’m not generally drawn to evolutionary explanations of human behaviour, there’s something about her work that I find compelling in multiple ways.

First, the sheer volume of material she draws together should demolish the persistent idea of art as a crowning achievement of human civilisation, a sophisticated layer of activity at the top of a Maslovian pyramid, a luxury to which we dedicate ourselves once the more fundamental layers of human needs have been taken care of. Rather, the activities we recognise as art are ubiquitous, woven into every example we have of humans being human together.

From the Darwinian perspective with which Dissanayake is working, the distinctive and seemingly universal character of this behaviour suggests that it is an evolutionary adaptation: a behaviour which has made a difference to the chances of creatures like us staying alive, reaching adulthood and having children who also live to adulthood.1 Again, this offers a counter to the idea of the arts as a luxury: if Dissanayake is on the right track, then the behaviour of art literally makes a life and death difference to creatures of our kind.

So what is the essence of this behaviour? After considering various ways of describing it, Dissanayake landed on the expression “making special”. The thing that marks out humans is that we “intentionally shape, embellish, and otherwise fashion aspects of [our] world to make these more than ordinary”. We take a colour, a pattern, a sound, a gesture, a word and lift it out of its everyday context, the setting in which we find or come up with it, and use it in other ways.

Here, I can’t help going beyond what Dissanayake says, because I’m tempted to say that we make worlds together through this behaviour, layered worlds that are woven with meaning. And, further, that the adaptiveness of this (in evolutionary terms) is suggestive of truth: this layered, patterned, meaning-riddled way of inhabiting the world and making it habitable is a better fit for the reality in which we find ourselves than if we attempt to inhabit it as flat and meaningless. And I take it as the mark of modernity that, in contrast to just about every other way of being human together we know about, there has been an attempt to inhabit the reality in which we find ourselves as though it were flat and meaningless.

But that opens a sizeable can of worms, some of which go wriggling through the pages of the book I’ve just written, and others I’m saving for the next book.

For today, I wanted to share a couple of notes on this matter of “making special”. Because the conversations Anna and I are having with participants have brought into view a couple of misleading ideas about “specialness” that haunt the ways of being human that have been taken for granted around here lately.

One version of this is “making special” as “making perfect”. Anna speaks about the debilitating effect of the pressure to make things “Instagram-perfect” – and the quietly radical practice of inviting people into a messy house! If we’re stuck with an idea that for things to be special, or simply good enough, we have to make our lives and our homes look like a photo shoot, then our ability to be human together grinds to a halt. The specialness worth having isn’t captured through a camera lens, it arises out of shared experience – but much of the aesthetics of advertising that developed through the twentieth century was an attempt to evoke this sense of specialness visually, on the page or the screen, until these synthetic substitutes colonised our imagination, leaving us neurotic about our messy human reality.

The other version I’ve been thinking about is “making special” as “making scarce”. Again and again, from different angles, I find myself returning to the production of scarcity as the paradoxical tendency of modern industrial societies. There’s more on this, too, in the new book – but for now, I want to point towards the opposite possibility: that we have the conditions for an abundance of “specialness”, precisely because of the thing Dissanayake is getting at when she identifies “making special” as the distinctive behaviour of the human animal.

In the past two days, I’ve heard participants talk about their experiences telling stories to classes of young children, singing to the dying, learning to care for patients in general practice and working with mothers around the birth of their children. In each case, there was a clear sense of showing up in a way that recognises and contributes to the specialness of what is taking place, here and now, in a given situation, and also a recognition that many of these situations are more or less universal. Another participant spoke about a culture of traditional music in Scotland and the creation of higher-education courses training technically brilliant musicians, but where the professionalisation of an artistic practice detaches it from the embedded, relational field that is the source of what matters most in this culture. This latter example gives a glimpse of how scarcity is produced and how attention is drawn away from the everyday specialness – the extraordinary ordinary, as my old friend Anthony McCann would say – and into a coupling of specialness with exceptional, scarce gifts.

These are themes that have been on my mind a lot and I’ll look forward to exploring further in public conversations, down the line, but I wanted to share these notes in the meanwhile. If we’ve lost the knack of “making special”, or lost confidence in this as a capacity that all of us have, then there are reasons for that, historical patterns that make sense of how we ended up here. But to the extent that Dissanayake is right to locate this capacity on an evolutionary level, that suggests that it is still there, still part of the kinds of creatures we are, and the seeming scarcity is artificially produced.

To be continued…"]]></description>
<dc:subject>dougaldhine 2026 scarcity ellendissanayake art arts behavior human humans adaptation making makingspecial ordinary everyday humanism meaning meaningmaking perfect craft luxury perfection ads advertising aesthetics specialness misoc anthonymccann exceptionalism artificialscarcity manufacturedscarcity gifts</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://pablohelguera.substack.com/p/building-strange-oases">
    <title>Building Strange Oases - Beautiful Eccentrics</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-05T05:34:51+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://pablohelguera.substack.com/p/building-strange-oases</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["What we often call creativity, innovation, research, or artistic practice may be understood as socially sanctioned forms of play. The adult does not stop playing; the adult learns to disguise play under other names.

This realization has important implications for participatory art. Too often, participatory projects assume that they must teach participants something entirely new. But perhaps the task is subtler. Perhaps the role of participatory art is not to introduce play into people’s lives but to reveal forms of play that are already present there.

In this sense, participatory art resembles the Platonic concept of anamnesis: the idea that learning is not the acquisition of new knowledge but the recollection of something we already possess. The teacher does not deposit knowledge into the student. Rather, the teacher creates the conditions through which the student recognizes something that was already latent within them.

The same may be true of participation. A successful participatory artwork does not force people into unfamiliar territory. It helps them become conscious of capacities they already exercise every day: imagining alternatives, inhabiting different perspectives, negotiating rules, collaborating with others, and navigating uncertainty. The artwork becomes a mirror in which participants encounter forms of knowledge they already possess but rarely have the opportunity to see.

I sometimes wonder whether the growing interest in participation, interactivity, social practice, and collaborative forms of art reflects a broader condition of contemporary life. We spend much of our time being evaluated, measured, categorized, and asked to justify our actions through tangible outcomes. Under such conditions, spaces in which exploration can occur without immediate consequence become increasingly rare.

What artists often create, consciously or unconsciously, are temporary refuges from these pressures. Not escapes from reality, but suspensions of some of reality’s demands. Spaces in which people can momentarily set aside the need to be correct, efficient, productive, or certain.

The most successful participatory works are rarely those that ask people to do something entirely unfamiliar. Rather, they offer recognizable frameworks—stores, libraries, classrooms, games, celebrations, performances, archives, playgrounds. We know how to inhabit these forms. The artist’s task is not to invent a world from nothing but to subtly reorganize a familiar one.

Play grants us permission. Permission to imagine alternatives. Permission to experiment without certainty. Permission to occupy different roles. Permission to ask “what if?” Permission, for a moment, to stop performing adulthood and to engage with the world through curiosity rather than obligation.

In this sense, the artistic oasis is not a place where we become children again. It is a place where we remember capacities that adulthood has taught us to conceal.

That, I believe, is the deepest promise of participatory art. Not that it teaches us something we did not know, but that it helps us recognize something we have known all along.

Perhaps that is why Pessoa’s garden continues to resonate. It was never simply a place from childhood. It was a reminder that somewhere within ordinary life there remains a territory governed by different rules. We enter it briefly, and then return. But for a moment, play is its master."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://summer-university.udk-berlin.de/?id=653">
    <title>The Slow Line: Art Through Train Travel and Public Transit Spaces</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-04T08:01:13+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://summer-university.udk-berlin.de/?id=653</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["#artisticpractice #publicspace

A site-based class turning trains, stations, and movement into artistic material. Through fieldwork, theory, and public encounters, participants create works for a final exhibition at railway stations

The Slow Line invites participants to explore how artistic practice can expand beyond institutional frameworks into public space, mobility, and actual travel experience. Set in and around railway stations in Berlin and Brandenburg, the class turns travel, waiting, and the rhythms of movement into inspiration for artistic practices. It culminates in a public exhibition at stations and light-based interventions in a historic tower, visible to commuters and passing trains.

The theme ENOUGH acts as critique and invitation: enough of institutional hierarchies, closed selection systems, and sterile white cubes. Instead, we shift the focus toward artistic work that grows from travel experience and direct engagement with the public realm. Participants develop site-responsive works on platforms, trains, and inside dormant railway structures, addressing the social, poetic, and ecological dimensions of travel.

Train journeys function as both method and metaphor: slow, collective movement as an alternative to acceleration, and as a gesture toward sustainability in times of climate urgency. The train becomes a mobile classroom in which perception sharpens, conversations unfold, and artistic ideas emerge organically, meeting railway employees and other creatives working in a relevant context.

The course combines theory, fieldwork, and experimentation. Readings - including Schivelbusch’s The Railway Journey and Bachelard’s Poetics of Space - frame discussions on perception, infrastructure, and spatial transformation. Guided visits to unique railway sites, supported by Deutsche Bahn and local railway communities, provide access to spaces rarely open to the public. These encounters form the foundation for individual artistic responses through photography, sound, video, writing, installation, interdisciplinary formats and more.

The workshop fosters autonomous production through exchange among participants from diverse backgrounds. The final exhibition offers a portfolio-strengthening opportunity rooted not in institutional mediation but in a hands on public exhibition practice.

Schedule

Days 1–4 – Introduction; theory inputs; first station observations; fieldwalks; train travel and train-based fieldwork; railway site visits; material collection; concept sketches; peer feedback; meetings with creatives working in the railway context and with railway employees.

Day 5 – Pause / individual planning.

Days 6–10 – Production phase; individual and group work; exhibition setup and light intervention; public exhibitions; closing reflections.
 
Prior application requirements

Short statement (max. 1 page) on your interest in mobility, public space, or site-specific work; Brief note on what you hope to explore during the class; CV.

Knowledge requirements

No prior railway or public art knowledge needed

Basic familiarity with artistic or creative research methods helpful

Openness to working process oriented, outdoors and in transit is essential

Equipment requirements

Computer (laptop) for editing, writing, and documentation

Any tools relevant to your own artistic practice, depending on what you plan to work with during the course (e.g., sketching materials, sound-recording devices, camera, video equipment, drawing tablets, etc.)

Natalia Irina Roman is an artist, curator, and researcher whose work investigates how mobility infrastructures - especially railways - shape perception, public space, and collective experience. She has developed an innovative teaching method that turns train journeys into artistic practices through observational travel, multi-sensory fieldwork in motion, and site-responsive production on trains, platforms, and in dormant railway architectures. She has been teaching at Bauhaus University Weimar and Berlin University of Arts.

Her Fulbright Fellowship in New York City deepened her research into interlocking towers and transit thresholds, informing ongoing collaborations in Berlin and Brandenburg with railway organisations and local communities. These partnerships open restricted infrastructures - signal towers, lock sheds, service areas - for artistic and curatorial experimentation. Roman designs teaching formats in these contexts, including classes conducted on trains and workshops situated in active stations. Her railway-related projects and past classes can be viewed under www.instagram.com/sitespecificideas.

She currently leads an international Creative Europe cooperation project, an artist in residency on trains across Europe, she has created public artworks supported by the Hauptstadtkulturfonds, and has worked in cultural education since 2017. Roman also serves on juries for public art and interdisciplinary cultural programmes, advocating for accessible, transparent and context-sensitive evaluation practices.

www.nataliairinaroman.eu "]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vinqz2Fs0zA">
    <title>Detroit Music, Creativity, Capital, &amp; the Working Class with Hanif Abdurraqib - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-03T20:27:18+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vinqz2Fs0zA</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Hanif Abdurraqib returns to the show to talk about his new project, the video podcast 'Living For The City' with season one focused on Detroit. We'll talk about some of the dynamics Hanif examines in the new series, including how the working class has found time to make such globally influential music, how gentrification impacts artists and musicians, and more.

Living For the City:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsjRzm4m1SLECMzBb96XQLA

As the podcast's description notes, "Before Detroit gave the world Motown, techno, and hip-hop, it gave the world something harder to name: a feeling that music made in basements and backrooms and borrowed spaces could become the soundtrack to an entire generation." 

"The full arc of how one city became the unlikely origin point for some of the most influential music ever made, told by the people who were actually there."

Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, essayist, and cultural critic from Columbus, Ohio. His bestselling and award-winning books include Go Ahead in the Rain: Notes to A Tribe Called Quest, They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us, A Little Devil in America: In Praise of Black Performance, and There’s Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension, and poetry collections A Fortune for your Disaster and The Crown Ain’t Worth Much."]]></description>
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    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Before Detroit gave the world Motown, techno, and hip-hop, it gave the world something harder to name: a feeling that music made in basements and backrooms and borrowed spaces could become the soundtrack to an entire generation. That is the story Living for the City is here to tell, and nobody alive is better equipped to tell it than Hanif Abdurraqib.

MacArthur Fellow. New York Times bestselling author. Hanif brings his singular voice to a new video podcast series that goes inside the streets, venues, and neighborhoods where iconic sounds are born, talking with the artists, DJs, producers, and community architects who built these movements from the ground up.

Season One is Detroit. Eight episodes. The full arc of how one city became the unlikely origin point for some of the most influential music ever made, told by the people who were actually there. This is not a music history lesson. This is a front-row seat to the moments that mattered.

Living for the City premieres May 13th."

[via:

"Detroit Music, Creativity, Capital, & the Working Class with Hanif Abdurraqib" (MAKC)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vinqz2Fs0zA ]]]></description>
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    <title>Art vs. Tucker Carlson: Revolutionary Tools or &quot;Tools&quot;? (with Saul Williams) - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-06-01T04:58:16+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2wk2M2mr0U</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Poet, musician, actor, & writer Saul Williams joins Bad Faith podcast for the first time to talk about how art can help feed this revolutionary moment and expand our understanding of our potential as a global community. But also, Briahna is still hyper-fixated on the prominent role the Israel-critical right is playing in the anti-war space, and what the implications are for building a left, anti war, internationalist movement that can't be "America first" insofar as our way of life is dependent on the immiseration of the global south. We work through all of this in a deeply nuanced, compassionate, and musical 2 hour chat."

[referenced here by Jared Ball:

"Saul Williams, Briahna Joy Gray, and I Love Boosters (*No Spoilers, Just Precursor)"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbSbtilM5nQ ]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mc4s1qu8IP8">
    <title>Françoise Vergès: The world is made through struggle - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-31T00:36:05+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mc4s1qu8IP8</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["In this episode, I sit down with the incredible Françoise Vergès. We had a beautiful conversation about how the politics of Réunion has animated her life's work,  how she was brought up in the struggle alongside the revolutionaries in her family, about her time in Algeria and Paris, decolonial feminisms (of course!), and the centrality of psychic life to our ongoing fight against fascism and oppressive systems. We honestly talked about so so much more, so I am excited for you to hear it! It was such an honor to sit down with a sister-comrade who has shaped so much of my thinking and political orientation to scholarship.

Françoise Vergès is a political theorist, curator and writer. She writes on the racist fabrication of premature death, decolonial feminism, the impossible decolonization of the western museum, climate disaster and antiracist, anticapitalist politics of vital needs. She works with artists and curates, since 2015, public performances with artists and activists. She is currently working on a film about anti colonial struggles in Reunion Island through her parents’ personal archives and her own.

For more information and on and links to Françoise's powerful work, see her website: https://francoiseverges.com/

This is the passage I read from Françoise's landmark A Decolonial Feminism (Pluto, 2019):

"I used a familiar fruit, the banana, to shed light on a number of analogies and elective affinities: the banana's dispersion from New Guinea to the rest of the world, the banana and slavery, the banana and US imperialism (banana republics), the banana and agribusiness (pesticides, insecticides--the chlordecone scandal in the Antilles), the banana and working conditions (the plantation regimes, sexual violence, repression), the banana and the environment (monocultures, pilluted water and land), the banana and sexuality (Josephine Baker), the banana and branding (Banana Republic), the banana and racism (when did the association of bananas and Negrophobia begin?), the banana and science (researching the 'perfect' banana), the banana and consumption (bringing bananas into the home, suggesting recipes), the banana and rituals for ancestors, and the banana and contemporary art. The method is simple: starting from one element to uncover a political, economic, cultural, and social ecosystem in order to avoid segmentation that the Western social-sciece method has imposed." p. 21-22"

[via:

"Palestine, Playing Fields; Perfidy! The False Capitalist Narrative Running (Puns😎) Throughout!" (this is the part that references college football (plays a clip from here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHDhdavY-u8 ) and is part of full show: https://www.youtube.com/live/2rHMi1MXILs )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PaUkUZ-X-_o

which points to

"🍌The Banana Method as Psychic Militancy!"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGNrqiLdKfQ

which points to

"Revolution Is Mental Health! ft Lara Sheehi"
https://www.youtube.com/live/PGnGalaE4Go ]
]]></description>
<dc:subject>françoisevergès 2026 larasheehi jaredball bananas collegefootball atlanta palestine mississippi louisiana lsu alabama economics society slavery enslavement bananarepublics newguinea imperialism empire colonialism colonization agribusiness pesticides insecticides chlordecone cloredecone antilles plantations sexualviolence repression environment monoctultures water land sexuality josephinebaker braning gap thegap race racism science consumption consumerism art politics swest socialscience socialsciences mentalhealth universityofgeorgia georgia corporatism capital bomanijones stevengodfrey culture decentering algeria réuniuon elsalvador feminism antiracism gaza anticapitalism activism decolonization decolonialism france museums decolonialfeminism segmentation anticolonialism anticolonialstruggle state police policing power domination stuggle coercion resistance settlers frantzfanon spatiality temporality globalsouth militarism patriarchy liberalism bodies gender flesh masculinity femininity consent poll</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3857278d02e2/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://placesjournal.org/article/modernist-schools-for-disabled-children-new-deal-era/">
    <title>Disabling Modernism</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-30T22:54:41+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://placesjournal.org/article/modernist-schools-for-disabled-children-new-deal-era/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["During the first decade of the New Deal, modernist architects designed schools for disabled children that proposed radical visions of civic care."]]></description>
<dc:subject>schools education history disabilities disability architecture design davidserlin via:javierarbona moderism us elizabethgiffey besswilliamson christinacogndell gingernolan neutrality segregation bodies beatrizcolomina eugenics philipjohnson nazism normanbelgeddes midcenturymodernism danishmodern capitalism race racialidology joymonicemalnar frankvodvarka aesthetics 1930s 1940s 1950s bauhaus experimentation schooling schooldesign europe johndewey mariamontessori montessori jeanpiaget rudolfsteiner waldorf pedagogy julietkinchin internationalstyle fascism cliostraatopenluchtschool janduiker eugènebeaudouin marcellods louisboulonnois handshofmann adolfkellermüller williamlescaze oaklanecountrydayschool noamchomsky richardneutra eerosaarinen crowislandschool losangeles williamruck acces accessibility assistivetechnology movement freedom washingtonboulevardschool denver burnhamhoyt charlesboettcherschool waltergropius lecorbusier fagusfactory villasavoye modernity oakland sunshineschoolforcrippledchildren bl</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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    <dc:date>2026-05-30T20:42:17+00:00</dc:date>
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    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Discover Sargent Claude Johnson, the first Black Modernist artist from the West Coast to gain national acclaim. He made a national impact as part of the Harlem Renaissance, even though he lived in the Bay Area and not in the movement’s center of Harlem in New York City."]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.oaklandreviewofbooks.org/trevor-paglen-how-to-see-like-a-machine-review/">
    <title>AI’s empty head can see only the apple</title>
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    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["In his new book, Trevor Paglen tries to look through a machine's eyes."]]></description>
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Find the English transcript of “The Glass House” here [https://radioambulante.org/en/translation/the-glass-house-translation ]. Or check out the Spanish transcript here. [https://radioambulante.org/transcripcion/la-casa-de-vidrio-transcripcion ]"]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/05/holly-greenberg-bird-collisions-in-the-anthropocene-community-art/">
    <title>Around North America, Community Members Are Stitching Nearly 11,000 Birds — Colossal</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-22T10:32:16+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/05/holly-greenberg-bird-collisions-in-the-anthropocene-community-art/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Every year, there are two major migration events. Birds, insects, fish, and other mammals head north in the spring to nest and breed and return south in the winter to feed and raise their young. Using BirdCast, a tool that’s active seasonally and allows anyone to see bird migration “heat maps” around the U.S., ornithologists tracked a record-breaking one billion birds migrating on a single October night in 2023 (last year, that number reached 1.2 billion). But on the night spanning October 4 to 5, something else really big happened: nearly 1,000 birds died in Chicago after hitting a single building.

McCormick Place Lakeside Center is situated along the Lake Michigan shoreline, set apart from many other buildings in a park-like space, and it has roughly enough windows to cover two football fields. As birds cruise along the shore, flitting over greenery, they sometimes mistake the reflections of nature in glass for the real thing. On the morning of October 5, hundreds of birds fell victim to architecture.

[image: "a hand holds a handmade fabric bird that has been tagged with the species name it's modeled after"]

When artist and educator Holly Greenberg heard this news, she was stunned. No stranger to nature and long interested in sustainability and the environment, she was nevertheless totally unaware of the scale of bird collisions in the U.S. During a day out in a Chicagoland arboretum, during a sabbatical from her role as assistant professor at Syracuse University, she worked with a group to remove invasive buckthorn and make room for native trees. A fellow volunteer rued the sad irony of planting new bird habitat when the feathered creatures try to fly into their reflections in glass instead.

“That was the first time that I’d heard that these birds were crashing into windows in Chicago,” Greenberg says. When she later read about the mass collision at McCormick Place, she thought, “Oh man, something needs to be done.” That’s when the multi-year project Bird Collisions in the Anthropocene was born.

Greenberg launched the initiative in 2024 to not only raise awareness of the problem but also to educate people about preventing incidents. Using data from the Chicago Field Museum and with the help of its lead ornithologist Dave Willard, Greenberg landed on a specific number: 10,863. That’s how many were found dead after hitting Chicago buildings in 2023 alone.

It’s estimated that around one billion birds die in window collisions annually throughout North America. One of the organizations working to collect this data and—just as importantly—to protect, rescue, and advocate for avians is the Chicago Bird Collision Monitors (CBCM) program. Every morning, volunteers walk the streets of the city to count and collect fallen individuals, taking them to wildlife sanctuaries for treatment or rehabilitation where possible. Most, however, don’t survive the impact.

[images: "a museum storage drawer at the Field Museum in Chicago with dozens of birds that have been collected after dying from window collisions" / "Bird specimens at the Field Museum"]

Paul Groleau, president of a company called Feather Friendly that makes bird-safe window treatments, suggests that many more die from window impacts than we realize. Greenberg hears people at her workshops say things like, “I heard a bird hit my window, but it flew off, so it’s fine.” Groleau, however, posits that about 60 percent of birds that are stunned do not survive. Their skulls are paper-thin, and if they don’t hemorrhage, they may sit under some shrubbery as they try to recover, which makes them more vulnerable as prey.

When the CBCM volunteers find dead specimens, they take them to the Field Museum, where the bodies become part of an archive Willard has overseen for decades. Many are preserved in the museum collection, each tagged and identified. At the very least, they are added to a carefully tended data set, which lists thousands upon thousands specifically killed by impacting windows at speed.

10,863 is the number Willard had recorded in 2023. Of course, the actual number of birds that collided with windows that year is exponentially higher, but the figure reflects the number that Willard and the CBCM volunteers found. And it’s the exact number that Greenberg is getting thousands of people to help recreate from fabric and glue. At the same time, she’s sharing knowledge about collisions with others through craft, science, advocacy, and social practice.

Starting with a small grant and a group of interns at Syracuse University, Bird Collisions in the Anthropocene began with the list of avians from the Field Museum, some basic crafting supplies, and photographs of individual birds so that makers could replicate the actual species. Eventually, Greenberg relocated to Evanston, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, and opened a studio where she hosts workshops and processes birds that are sent in from all over North America.

[image: "people work around a table making birds from fabric and glue"]

Workshops are facilitated across the U.S. and Canada, and so far, a total of more than 140 have been held. Materials can be downloaded from the website, and anyone can host a workshop. Popular locations include public libraries and schools. Cornell Lab of Ornithology, which is behind the BirdCast tool, has even launched a pilot program to send hundreds of sew-a-bird kits to biology teachers in New York State in order to complete a core education requirement.

The hands-on, participatory, and very communal aspect of the bird workshops is fundamental to the project’s success. Greenberg opens her studio to the public on the first Saturday of every month as part of the Evanston Made program, and private gatherings can be organized, too. “People get into the flow, no one is touching their phone, and everyone is super concentrated,” Greenberg says. “They’re working with awkward materials, and it’s a mess, but it’s a good creative mindset.”

Studies have shown that hands-on or experiential learning is linked to greater knowledge retention, attentiveness, experimentation, and more. As people create their house sparrows, dark-eyed juncos, golden-crowned kinglets, and many more—and one’s level of technical skill is no matter—a sense of camaraderie builds around a common pursuit. Greenberg then provides resources about how to help prevent bird collisions, such as information about remediation technologies.

Businesses like Feather Friendly make products that can be applied directly to any window, most commonly in the form of small vinyl dots. It also offers Bird Divert, which uses clear dots that are actually hard for us to see, but due to the way birds’ vision works, the application helps them to differentiate between architecture and nature. Fritted glass is another method, which involves ceramic details baked right onto the surface of the glass.

[image: "artist Taro Takizawa stands on a ladder in front of his window painting on the top of artist Holly Greenberg's studio in Evanston, Illinois" / "Artist Taro Takizawa in front of the ‘Bird Collisions in the Anthropocene’ studio in Evanston"

Greenberg sees the artistic potential in the remedial window coverings, and she has previously invited artist Taro Takizawa to apply beautiful organic lines made of hand-cut vinyl on the top windows of her Evanston studio. For a forthcoming social project this summer, Greenberg plans to install different types of remediation dots on the large storefront windows of the space, plus an installation by artist Alice Hargrave, who creates abstract works using the sound waves of bird calls.

While the official number of finished birds is currently at 3,451, Greenberg estimates there are at least 1,000 more awaiting tagging and entry into the project’s handwritten ledger, which is reminiscent of museum catalogues before computerized records came into widespread use. With the help of a team of interns, she labels each bird individually with its species name, its artist, and where it “flew” in from. And installation opportunities abound.

Eventually, the birds will create one giant “carpet” to illustrate not only the poignant and urgent reality of bird collision deaths, but the power of collective action. In the meantime, groups of the fabric critters go on view occasionally in other exhibitions. One of these is Chicago Architecture Center’s forthcoming show, Flyway City, which “aims to catalyze positive change on making cities safer and more welcoming for birds and diverse wildlife” by focusing on how architecture can help to protect avians from the get-go.

The exhibition is organized by Studio Gang, whose lead architect, Jeanne Gang, has also encouraged the city of Chicago to enact building codes that are more bird-friendly. While Evanston has an ordinance that requires bird-friendly building design, Chicago does not yet, although it’s been on the table many times. Greenberg hopes that continued advocacy and information-sharing empowers others to speak up, too, so that these types of changes will be seen in more communities all over North America.

Flyway City runs from June 11 to January 3, 2027, in Chicago. Keep updated about workshops and other ways to get involved by following Greenberg’s Instagram.

[additional photos]"]]></description>
<dc:subject>birds sewing art 2026 studiogange jeannegang architecture multimedia morethanhuman nature wildlife mmigration animals insects fish mammals birdcast hollygreenberg paulgroleau windows cbcm tarotakizawa human-animalrelations human-animalrelationships birddivert</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vbx1MvxUldU">
    <title>Ruby Neri / Reminisce: Living Proof Radio. Ep.212. - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-19T06:46:54+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vbx1MvxUldU</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Ruby Neri, also known by her graffiti name Reminisce, emerged as a prominent figure during the golden era of San Francisco’s graffiti scene in the 1990s. She immersed herself in the Bay Area’s graffiti culture, painting, shoplifting and hanging alongside figures such as KR, AMAZE, Barry McGee (TWIST), Margaret Kilgallen (RIP) & Alicia McCarthy; all of whom helped define the street graffiti & art scene of the time. 

Rather than a classic throw-up, her graffiti focused on riderless horses that appeared across the Mission District. Her horses became iconic and are considered a classic amongst the Bay Area scene.

By the mid-1990s, Neri shifted from graffiti to studio practice, pursuing an MFA at UCLA and exploring new media; particularly ceramics. Over time, she grew tired of the adjacent phenomena that come with the culture of graffiti. She moved away from graffiti to sculptural vessels and figurative ceramic forms. Her ceramic works, often marked by vibrant sprayed glazes and stylized female figures, maintained a connection to her past as Reminisce. In recent years, Neri has returned to painting, bringing her career full circle. Today, Neri’s work bridges the raw immediacy of graffiti with the refinement of fine art. She is a key figure in the evolution of Bay Area art from underground to institutional recognition."

[other versions/clips/segments:

"Her Art Was Built on Theft — Now It Hangs in Galleries"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOZNdGzB7E8

"The Graffiti Legends Who Changed San Francisco Forever"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szWi8zHgAA8

"The Police Crack-Down: San Francisco Graffiti"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ttEM8wpYlg ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>rubineri 2025 graffiti missionschool art sanfranciso streetart artists arts barrymcgee margaretkilgallen aliciamccarthy 1990s bayarea</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll/a-lo-fi-rebellion-against-ai">
    <title>A Lo-Fi Rebellion Against A.I. | The New Yorker</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-07T20:47:21+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll/a-lo-fi-rebellion-against-ai</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["As slick, machine-generated visuals become ubiquitous, artists and designers are embracing a style of handmade imperfection."]]></description>
<dc:subject>kylechayka handmade slow small ai artificialintelligence resistance 2026 art design imperfection genai generativeai</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4c56fb1b1e34/</dc:identifier>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sY2bvKrW_M">
    <title>How Physics is Like Poetry with Chanda Prescod-Weinstein - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-07T04:25:48+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sY2bvKrW_M</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["When the world gets to be too much, contemplating the endless wonder and beauty of the cosmos can be a huge relief. After all, we’re insignificant in the grand scale of space and time. But cosmic thinking can also teach us so much about ourselves. This week, Adam sits with Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, professor of physics and faculty member in women’s and gender studies at the University of New Hampshire, to talk about the truths we uncover about ourselves when we search for the truths of the universe. Find Chanda’s new book, The Edge of Space-Time: Particles, Poetry, and the Cosmic Dream Boogie"]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://hyperallergic.com/the-death-of-the-art-school/">
    <title>The Death of the Art School</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-06T02:25:27+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://hyperallergic.com/the-death-of-the-art-school/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["The rampant corporatization and “administrification” of American higher-education institutions has turned students into mere consumers."]]></description>
<dc:subject>us education highered highereducation arteducation art arts administrativebloat administration corporatism corporatization consumerism colleges universities hakantopal</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8a8ffc77e403/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://thebeautifultruth.org/life/psychology/iain-mcgilchrist-brains-hemispheres/">
    <title>Iain McGilchrist: Re-enchanting the Brain's Hemispheres — The Beautiful Truth</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-05T18:00:34+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://thebeautifultruth.org/life/psychology/iain-mcgilchrist-brains-hemispheres/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Can we re-enchant our view of the world by re-engaging a ‘right hemispheric’ view of life, love and faith?"

[via Mo Bitar:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9dgeM_KuB8 ]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://thefarocafe.com/">
    <title>Faro Cafe</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-05T15:48:33+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://thefarocafe.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Faro is a coffee shop in Cambridge built on leisure, community, and a deep love for Thoreau. In a world obsessed with the "cold hand of productivity," we’ve chosen to go the other way. We are an analog space, designed for those who believe that real connection happens when the screens go away.


Whether it’s through live music, skill-sharing, or just a long conversation over a ceramic mug, Faro is a place to reconnect—with each other, with the planet, and with the places we inhabit.


Our Philosophy:

• Beyond Consumerism: We imagine regenerative futures through repair workshops, pop-up art, and community talks.

• Deliberate Presence: A space built for conversation and connection, not for "co-working."

• Fiercely Local: Independently owned and dedicated to protecting the disappearing character of our neighborhood.

Faro is your friendly, light-hearted, and slightly irreverent home in Harvard Square. Leave the laptop at home; bring a friend (or a book) instead."

[via:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/11zlpahmklfgr8YOUrtLnY ]]]></description>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/t:thoreau"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://open.spotify.com/episode/11zlpahmklfgr8YOUrtLnY">
    <title>Sara Hendren: Who Is the Built World Actually Built For? - Art of Inquiry | Podcast on Spotify</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-05T14:11:09+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://open.spotify.com/episode/11zlpahmklfgr8YOUrtLnY</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Sara Hendren didn't start out in engineering. She started as a visual artist, then moved into cultural history, studying objects, artifacts, and what they say about the world that made them. Then life brought her into pediatric spaces filled with a new kind of object: gadgets and tools designed for a child's body, yes, but also doing quiet therapeutic work, covered in butterflies and bugs, useful and expressive all at once. She found herself asking: what is an object broadcasting beyond its user? What does it mean that eyeglasses get sold as fashion while hearing aids are hidden away as clinical? That was the moment everything snapped together, her training in the history of artifacts, the politics of disability, and the material culture of prosthetics all converging at once. In this free-flowing conversation, Sara walks us through the space between mechanical design and design for expression, why the logical and meticulous side of making art and the creative side of meaningful engineering are really the same instinct. As the world asks more and more from its engineers, Sara brings it all back to a question that feels more urgent than ever: can a designed object change not just how we move through the world, but how we see it?"

[via:
https://ablerism.micro.blog/2026/04/29/i-had-fun-speaking-on.html

"I had fun speaking on the Art of Inquiry, a podcast created by two Northeastern engineering students interested in the arts and humanities. My strange career path, my mentor Krzysztof Wodiczko introducing me to interrogative design, raising a child with Down syndrome, studio + lab culture, more."]]]></description>
<dc:subject>sarahendren 2026 architecture design disabilities disability accessibility art bodies prosthetics sofiaodeh mayaeinhorn engineering making socialpracticeart science inquiry history conflictkitchen edibleestates socialpractice online internet covid-19 pandemic coronavirus offline social slow small audiencesofone socialjustice ai artificialintelligence technology time perception politics genai generativeai activism poetry human humanism humans howwewrite writing teaching pedagogy highered highereducation culturemaking culture life living howwelive socialmedia being waysofbeing modernity method patternrecognition krzysztofwodiczko downsyndrome interrogativedesign careers purpose meaning meaningmaking children parenting arts humanities friendship relationships leisure artleisure leisurearts identity passion expression objects affect emotions embodiment awe wonder buildings senses spirituality sacredness codeswitching artifacts translation language communication howwemake fabrication ramps risd olincollege builtwo</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.inventorypress.com/product/living-to-learn-art-education-for-the-common-good">
    <title>Living to Learn: Art &amp; Education for the Common Good, edited by Noah Simblist — Inventory Press</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-05T04:24:34+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.inventorypress.com/product/living-to-learn-art-education-for-the-common-good</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["How can alternative organizations and traditional institutions learn from one another? How have exhibition platforms created space for artists to generate learning environments? How have these practices changed assumptions about art institutions and artistic production? How can we think about the economic, ecological, and institutional sustainability of all of these practices?

Living to Learn, edited by Noah Simblist of Virginia Commonwealth University, presents the work of over seventy artists, curators, collectives, and scholars who address contemporary art as a site of learning in the twenty-first century. Building on earlier histories of education as civic service for the common good, it focuses on the last twenty-five years while exploring the future of art education as a practice unfolding both in and beyond school. The book’s case studies reveal how innovations in education have a dynamic relationship with artistic practice, alternative arts organizations, universities, museums, and biennials."]]></description>
<dc:subject>art education arteducation openstudioproject lcproject 2026 noahsimblist ecology economics sustainability learning howwelearn life living civilservice alternative altgdp museums universities colleges highered highereducation biennials</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StrpSp8anQM">
    <title>Vicky Osterweil on Disney, Intellectual Property and Storytelling - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-05-03T19:43:34+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StrpSp8anQM</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["This week, we’re featuring a recent, live interview that I did at Firestorm books with Vicky Osterweil, anarchist writer and worker, author of In Defense of Looting and more recently The Extended Universe: How Disney Killed The Movies and Took Over the World (Haymarket, 2026). Vicky is a member of the Collective of Anarchist Writers (CAW), and you can also find her on Bluesky and what she's thinking about what she's watching at Letterboxd.

During the chat Vicky talks about intellectual property and how it overlaps between entertainment and other elements like technology and medicine, the shaping and limiting effects IP has on popular culture and imagination, the film industry and more."

[See also:

"In Defense of Looting with Vicky Osterweil" (2021)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWxjrTRDbio

"In Defense of Looting with Vicky Osterweil This week we are getting the chance to air a conversation that I had with writer, anarchist, and agitator Vicky Osterweil about her recently published book  In Defense of Looting, a Riotous History of Uncivil Action published  (Bold Type Press, August 2020). We get to talk about a lot of different topics in this interview, how the book emerged from a zine written in the middle of the Ferguson Uprising of the summer of 2014, its reception by the far right and by comrades, her process in deciding what to include in this book, the etymology of the word “loot” and ensuing implications thereof, why you should totally transition if that’s the right thing for you to do, and many more topics!"

and 

"The Interregnum: Roundtable with Vicky Osterweil" (2022)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3MRLe0Gcno

"This week we are pleased to present something a little bit new for TFS listeners. This is a kind of informal round table discussion that co host Scott and I had alongside Vicky Osterweil, who has been on the show before to speak on her book In Defense of Looting; A Riotous History of Uncivil Action. We all sat down to talk about a short and thought provoking article which was published in January of 2022 called “The Interregnum: The George Floyd Uprising, the coronavirus pandemic, and the emerging social revolution” which was published on the Haters Cafe and we will link to it in the show notes for anyone interested in reading it.

An interregnum is defined as being a period of discontinuity in a government, organization, or social order, and it typically points to time frames at which there isn’t a clear monarch or reigning body in a given place. This article points to the many ways the George Floyd uprising, the covid 19 pandemic, the rise of anti-work, and what the article calls the Great Refusal (a pivot from the ‘Great Resignation’ nomenclature of some mass media) have all created the conditions for a possible broadscale social revolution. Also stay tuned to the end of this episode where we chat briefly about what books we’re reading right now. We hope you enjoy this chat!

((note to listeners, I’m now using the name I use in real life for this radio project, which is Amar. It’s become more and more important to me to be as fully acknowledging of my culture and ethnicity as possible, and this is one way I’m choosing to do that))"]]]></description>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2024/11/the-art-of-play/">
    <title>Swing Through the World's Most Spectacular Artist-Designed Playgrounds — Colossal</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-26T08:30:00+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2024/11/the-art-of-play/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><dc:subject>2024 playgrounds design art publicart parks</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.unrulyplay.com/">
    <title>Unruly Play — Curated by Imagination of Things</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-26T08:27:51+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.unrulyplay.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["A collection of 169 works of play in unlikely places. Games about unusual things. Unexpected encounters. Curated by Imagination of Things."

[via:
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/04/unruly-play-digital-archive/

"“Play is how we give permission,” says Vitor Freire, co-founder of the Amsterdam-based studio Imagination of Things. “Permission to challenge what’s fixed, rehearse what doesn’t exist yet, and close the distance between people who wouldn’t otherwise meet.”

Freire and co-founder Monique Grimord take play seriously and, in a new project, their studio created a vast repository of 169 artworks, designs, games, and more that have offered an unexpected encounter with imagination and joy. From Rael San Fratello’s award-winning “Teeter-Totter Wall” to the healing Wind Phone project to a 12-foot puppet walking the world, Unruly Play is a multi-decade archive of participatory projects, public spaces, and digital creations that invite surprise and camaraderie.

“Our collaborators have always asked us where our ideas come from,” Gimrod says, “and the truth is that they come from references that rarely talk to each other—it can be a seesaw through a border wall or a phone booth connected to the dead… We wanted to create unusual dialogues and support new creative practices, and Unruly Play was our answer for that.”

Fully interactive, the project is searchable by theme or browsable through a shuffle feature. To dive deeper into the power of play, check out this compendium of artist-designed spaces."]]]></description>
<dc:subject>play playgrounds games children nature publicart architecture archive digital installation performance public art sculpture</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://aeon.co/essays/lessons-from-the-fairness-of-african-fractal-societies">
    <title>Lessons from the fairness of African fractal societies | Aeon Essays</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-22T03:41:24+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://aeon.co/essays/lessons-from-the-fairness-of-african-fractal-societies</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Where centralised societies excel at extraction, African fractal systems allow for circulation, reciprocity and return"]]></description>
<dc:subject>likamkyanzaire 2026 africa decentralization centralization society fractals circulation reciprocity return roneglash cameroon architecture zambia cities urban urbanplanning place logone-birni geometry design. complexity economics economy europe governance government benoîtmandelbrot benoitmandelbrot recursion self-similarity scale scaling nathancohen china shenzhen gps yanguangchen xiomingman michaelediagbonya yemiebenezeraluko duyilewilliamabiodun nigeria religion art numeracy patterns fractalpatterns socialorder culture lineage mutualaid mutualsupport communities community bonaventurechigozieuzoh iheanyivalentineekechikwu nnamdiazikiwe form kinship flexibility linaeage egalitarianism class hierarchy hierarvhies simonroberts hpgulliver ethnography anthropology solidarity support globalsouth globalnorth value values hoarding extraction equality arusha igbo chokwe ubuntuai openai cooperatives deeplyrooted liberation design institutions concentration diffusion fairness equity</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2026/04/10/art-cecilia-vicuna-poetry-chile-sculpture/">
    <title>For Artist Cecilia Vicuña, Being Busy Is Not a Sign of Success</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-22T02:37:24+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2026/04/10/art-cecilia-vicuna-poetry-chile-sculpture/</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["At 77, the Chilean-born, New York-based artist is having one of the biggest years of her career. But her body and soul would rather be somewhere else."]]></description>
<dc:subject>ceciliavicuña art artists slow small chile ecology environment poetry 2026 ellamartin-gachot</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQB2mvUvROw">
    <title>The Music Video Is Dead, Long Live The Music Video (Season Premiere) - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-18T22:46:27+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQB2mvUvROw</link>
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    <title>You know what consciousness is: you live in soul land | Aeon Essays</title>
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    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Humans weren’t given souls by God or genes. We made them ourselves with language – turning sentience into something sacred"]]></description>
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    <title>Ten years of &quot;Alaska&quot;: Maggie Rogers on going viral and singing for 200,000 protestors - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-18T04:31:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CK5y9N1kuNk</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Ten years ago, Maggie Rogers was a senior at NYU, scrambling to finish a song for a music production class she was close to failing. The guest critic that week happened to be Pharrell Williams. She played him "Alaska," a track she'd written in about fifteen minutes. It is a bit of folk songwriting crossed with the electronic music she'd fallen for studying abroad. Pharrell told her he'd never heard anything that sounded like it. Someone was filming. The clip went viral, and it launched Maggie into pop stardom. 

Maggie Rogers has released three studio albums, earned a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist, and gone back to school to pick up a master's from Harvard Divinity School, where she studied the spirituality of public gatherings. And in the last few months she's been as visible offstage as on — advocating for free speech in DC, performing for 200,000 people at a protest in Minneapolis alongside Joan Baez, and delivering a haunting performance during the final run of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, which CBS is ending in May.

This week host Charlie Harding got to sit down with Maggie live at Chelsea Studios, in front of a room of current NYU students. It’s the same school, ten years later, now with Charlie in the professor's chair and Maggie as the visiting artist.

VIDEO: Caleb Hinojosa https://www.calebhinojosa.com/

CHAPTERS
00:00 Introduction
01:14 Alaska Origin Story
03:50 Lyrics Then And Now
05:50 Can Viral Happen Again
06:30 Choosing Slow Growth
10:08 Advice For Sudden Fame
11:29 Writing After Pharrell
13:20 Colbert Finale Performance
15:55 Free Speech And Protest Era
17:31 Activism as Art
18:11 Protesting a Broken System
19:25 Fear into Music
22:07 What Makes a Protest Song
24:28 Starting the Foundation
25:23 Rest and Record Making
28:11 Creative Rest Time
30:24 Writing vs Collaboration

SONGS DISCUSSED
Maggie Rogers "Alaska"
Maggie Rogers "Better"
Maggie Rogers "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)" (cover of Fred Astaire original)
Maggie Rogers "Different Kind of World"
Marvin Gaye "What's Going On"
Bob Dylan "The Times They Are a-Changin'"
USA for Africa "We Are the World""]]></description>
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    <title>Great art is a moral accomplishment. It mirrors the struggle to see clearly in everyday life.</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-17T07:00:09+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://mcrawford.substack.com/p/great-art-is-a-moral-accomplishment</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["Iris Murdoch on Art, Attention and the Metaphysics of the Good"

...

"Iris Murdoch is best known as a writer of novels. She wrote twenty-six of them, recurring often to the question of human freedom versus the many varieties of determinism. One of the novels, The Sea, The Sea, won the Booker Prize in 1978. She was also a formidable student of philosophy, and taught the subject at Oxford for many years.

Philosophy at Oxford had departed from the long tradition of reflection about ultimate things. In the 2022 book Metaphysical Animals, Clare Mac Cumhaill and Rachael Wiseman write that before World War I, the Oxford philosophers took themselves to be engaged in a bold undertaking:

<blockquote>to kill off the subject formerly known as ‘philosophy’ and to replace it with a new set of logical, analytic and scientific methods known as logical positivism. Speculative metaphysical enquiry—the pursuit of knowledge of human nature, morality, God, reality, truth and beauty—was to give way to clarification and linguistic analysis in the service of science. The only questions permitted were those that could be answered by empirical methods.</blockquote>

From the vantage of the present, it is fair to say that they were successful in this, insofar as philosophy was replaced with... whatever we should call that enterprise that takes place in philosophy departments today, in cognitive science, and in all those allied disciplines that name themselves with a “neuro-” prefix. Viewed from the outside, the aspirations of the analytical school look like nothing so much as an elaborate system for evading big questions.

We are aided in identifying them as such by a counter-movement of thought that began after World War II, led by Iris Murdoch, Elizabeth Anscombe, and Philippa Foot. They inaugurated what would become a dissident strand within academic philosophy. Unlike the existentialists, who likewise rejected the positivist edifice, the Oxford dissidents were more frontally engaged with the analytical turn and sought to identify what had gone wrong in it. That they were women is probably significant. That they were writing after the most shattering events of the twentieth century is also surely significant, as Cumhaill and Wiseman note. When the first of the two great wars ended, the logicians and linguistic analysts picked up right where they had left off, as though nothing significant had occurred that might bear on their undertaking. Iris Murdoch and her circle, by contrast, saw the necessity of returning to the biggest questions. Their moment resembles ours, in that respect, and Murdoch’s essays are a treasure to be recovered.

Murdoch’s Moral Phenomenology

In one of those essays, “The Idea of Perfection,” what is at stake is the question of how we ought to picture the human being. This is consequential because, as she says in another essay, man is the creature who makes a picture of himself and then comes to resemble that picture. Bad philosophy may fail as a realistic description of the how things are, but such descriptions can be fertile. They are disseminated and taken up, receding as objects of scrutiny but inflecting our patterns of thinking and feeling.

Analytical philosophy of mind has a hard time dealing with the fact that we are moral beings. That is, we have an “evaluative outlook” (I use the phrase of philosopher Talbot Brewer). The things we perceive “show up” for us in a neutral palette sometimes, but often they do so in vivid colors such as lame, charming, inane, subtle, funny, pathetic,winsome, desperate, inspiring, vulgar, overwrought, sly, generous, elegant and so on. These are not neutral descriptive words; they carry a judgment. Also, they are not obtusely binary, such as “good” and “bad,” but more directly tied-on to human situations, more affectively pungent, the kind of words you would need if (like a novelist) you were to undertake something like “moral phenomenology.” Which, come to think of it, is perhaps a good description of Murdoch’s philosophical oeuvre.

Our evaluative outlook—our sense of where value lies, what it looks like, our ability to detect new flavors of it—can change, and typically this change has a direction to it, such that we can call it progress. When a life goes well, our judgments become deeper and more discerning. It would sting to learn that that someone you respect regards you as complacent and self-satisfied, incapable of being arrested by the new in a way that induces an evaluative shift.

The idea of progress in moral perception, indeed the very concept of moral perception, is unintelligible if we dogmatically insist that “value judgments” are merely subjective. That is, if we suppose that when we call something good, this means nothing more than “I prefer this.” Yet such an ethically denuded ontology—there really isn’t anything value-laden out there to perceive—must be insisted upon if philosophy of mind is to claim jurisdiction over the question of how the mind perceives, and insist that it can do so with the logical and conceptual rigor it prides itself on. Such rigor, it is thought, requires abstaining from the fuzzy domain of value judgments. Features of the moral life that are clearly entangled with our “cognitive” capacities (such as perception) must be quarantined, in order to maintain a notion of cognition that is narrow enough to be amenable to analytical methods.

What philosophy of mind needs, then, is an ally in the sphere of ethics that will agree to a clear demarcation between their respective turfs. This demarcation is accomplished if “the good,” understood as the generic of evaluative terms, has no ontological status of its own. Such a tacit agreement established the intellectual cartel that has set the terms of modern life. Mind the gap and you will be in good standing, metaphysically.

Of course, this gap between Is and Ought long predates the rise of today’s narrow academic disciplines. David Hume pointed the way in the eighteenth century. A couple of centuries down that road, the result is a crippling lack of self-awareness in those human sciences that aspire to analytical rigor, driven by a kind of physics-envy. Murdoch writes that philosophy of mind has “been imposing upon us particular value judgments in the guise of a theory of human nature” without knowing that it does so. For its part, “modern ethics tends to constitute a sort of Newspeak which makes certain values non-expressible.”

The Central Place of Love

Among the facts that have been forgotten or theorized away is the fact that “love is a central concept of morals.” Contemporary philosophers “constantly talk of freedom” but “they rarely talk of love” (299-300). This inarticulacy about love matters. If we don’t have an adequate vocabulary and conceptual repertoire for some phenomenon, we are unable to use language to elaborate our experience. The experience itself becomes harder to fix in the mind, less available to us.

Murdoch’s positive project is arrestingly unconventional. She argues for the central place of love, not just in interpersonal ethics where one might expect to find a discussion of love, but as an epistemic principle. Loving is at the root of our capacity to apprehend the world in its true colors. And this, in turn, is due to an ontological fact concerning the status of “the good.”

Murdoch declares herself a Platonist. The good is real, not a projection of our subjective consciousness onto things we happen to value. The good makes a demand on us, and to respond to this demand adequately is to see things clearly. True perception is thus a moral accomplishment. As we shall see, some of her most compelling arguments demonstrate this in the context of distinguishing great art from ordinary, bad art.

Before spelling these things out, Murdoch needs to clear away a lot of underbrush. (Numbers in parentheses are page numbers in the collection Existentialists and Mystics. I will be referring to three of the essays: “The Idea of Perfection,” “On ‘God’ and ‘Good’,” and “On the Sovereignty of Good Over Other Concepts.”)

At issue in the Oxford scene was, again, the question of whether “goodness” is a real constituent of the world, something out there. To suppose that it is, was declared to be an instance of “the naturalist fallacy.” The sophisticated position was that “Good is indefinable because judgments of value depend on the will and choice of the individual.” “Goodness is not an object of insight or knowledge, it is a function of the will.” “Good must be thought of, not as part of the world, but as a movable label affixed to the world; for only so can the agent be pictured as responsible and free” (301).

Tacitly, according to this position, if there were a substantial Good independent of our will, it would threaten the “freedom” that, as Murdoch noted, is the constant preoccupation of modern thought. That is because such a Good would compel us in certain directions rather than others. It would be perverse to choose something bad, after all. It would be irrational. So both our freedom and the sovereignty of our reason were taken to depend on there not being a Good that transcends us and is independent of us. Evidently, thereis a sense of threat to the self that underlies the appeal of moral subjectivism.

This anxiety rests on the modern understanding of what reason is—and of what freedom is. Both notions are narrow, when viewed against the larger sweep of the human tradition. Here, reason always means something public, in the sense that, if something is available to reason, it should be available to all. If it isn’t, it is probably some private, irrational delusion. Meanwhile, freedom is understood as a characteristic of the individual will, revealed in a moment of choice. For this choice to be truly free, it must be entirely my own, a pure eruption of the will that is unconditioned by anything outside the will. True choices are necessarily ungrounded. If you are compelled toward some choice by your reasoning about the situation, it isn’t really an act of your own will. Any person similarly situated, thinking clearly, would choose the same. So the human being is a combined thing: an impersonal rational thinker, whose reasoning cannot escape a publicly observable machinery of logical necessity and shared facts, plus a personal will that leaps around according to no logic at all, until in the moment of choice and action a man inserts himself into the machinery of public reason. It is a picture that combines total freedom and determinism. Murdoch thinks it is mistaken on both sides.

Reason, in this system, must be neutral and objective, carefully abstaining from value judgments. This is what allows us to think of reason and will as separable faculties of the person, corresponding to the distinction between facts and values. “If the will is to be totally free, the world it moves in must be devoid of normative characteristics, so that morality can reside entirely in the pointer of pure choice” (333).

Murdoch names this set of mutually supporting doctrines “behaviorist-existentialist.” Behaviorist because the operation of reason can be detected only by publicly observable actions, and this standard of detection gets imported back into the thing itself: Reason is the sort of thing that issues in actions, as opposed to private revery. To existentialists, on the other side of this intellectual arrangement, freedom means freedom to choose in a pure act of will. There is a hint of mischief in Murdoch’s pointing out that these positions are allied, if we consider them personified. Behaviorists and existentialists wear different costumes (on one side, sensible shoes; on the other, berets) and are sure to detest one another. Yet the determinists and the freedomists need one another, locked as they are in common mistake.

In a subsequent essay titled “On ‘God’ and ‘Good’,” Murdoch makes a related point. In current moral philosophy, the moral agent is “pictured as an isolated principle of will” beside “a lump of being which has been handed over to other disciplines, such as psychology or sociology. On the one hand a Luciferian philosophy of adventures of the will, and on the other natural science. Moral philosophy, and indeed morals, are thus undefended against an irresponsible and undirected self-assertion which goes easily hand in hand with some brand of pseudo-scientific determinism” (338). Given this easy rapport between pseudo-scientific determinism and Luciferian freedomism, it becomes easier to understand why, for example, the 2023 book Determined, by the Stanford neuro-sage Robert Sapolsky, would reach the bestseller list in a society where “liberation” provides the standard of progress.

The Formative Role of Attention

As a corrective to the prevailing view, Murdoch emphasizes the role of attention in shaping the world that is actually present to our consciousness. This is happening all the time. By the time a moment of choice arrives, we are already inhabiting a world shaped (for us) by our habits of attention, in the course of which specific currents of its value-laden nature stand forth. Our established habits of seeing will largely set our response. This is a retrospective view of how we became the kind of person who is likely to respond in such-and-such a way.

Looking forward, we are for the most part free to allocate our attention. The question of what to attend to is the question of what to value. The morally relevant “choosing” in some episode happens, then, not in a clap of the will at a dramatic moment of decision but in a piecemeal and cumulative way that is continuous, and has already happened by the time the choice must be made. This does not mean we are not free. But Murdoch’s account does highlight a fact that is weirdly absent from the prevailing view: the existence of moral effort. In large part, such effort consists of the struggle to control one’s attention.

And this is indeed effortful. “Of course psychic energy flows, and more easily flows, into building up convincingly coherent but false pictures of the world... Attention is the effort to counteract such states of illusion” (329). Basically, you have to get out of your own head to see things clearly. She calls such effort “unselfing”.

In “On ‘God’ and ‘Good’,” Murdoch says she is not a Freudian, but she shares Freud’s view that our psychic energies are not simply available to us to direct in a deliberate way; there is a roiling layer of the unconscious and the semi-conscious urging us along at every turn. And the consistent tendency of these psychic energies is selfish. It is a tendency shaped and hardened into particular channels by our own biography. Murdoch writes, “Moral change and moral achievement are slow; we are not free in the sense of being able suddenly to alter what we can see and ergo what we desire and are compelled by...” (331). Unselfing may be accomplished through self-criticism, but such a negative effort of ego-asceticism has its limits.

But to love is to be drawn out of our self-centered patterns toward some positive object that is other than oneself. Love thus has the same outward-pulling tendency as attention. And reciprocally, to attend to something fully is, in a sense, to love it.

Murdoch’s suggestion here is a bit obscure. May not my accomplishment of clear vision, through a patient and just attention, reveal something that is rightly to be hated? How then are we to suppose there is a natural kinship between love and attention? I believe her position becomes tenable if we provide a premise that is a bit elusive, appearing only fleetingly, in her own account: The good, which is lovable, is somehow fundamental, ontologically. If that is the case, attention that penetrates to this fundamental layer will reveal something lovable, even in the hateful. I will return to this question at the end.

Relieving the Burden of Choice Through Obedience to Reality

Murdoch provides philosophical ground for making sense of “the paradox of choice” (a term coined by Barry Schwartz and taken up in recent psychology). Psychologists find that a proliferation of choices makes people less satisfied with whatever choice they end up making. This is not surprising, if the crazy proliferation of choices under consumer capitalism is the public correlate of the bad philosophy Murdoch has identified: our identification of freedom with the ungrounded leaping about of the will. A false picture of the human situation can make people unhappy, in ways detectable by empirical psychology.

Murdoch writes, “If I attend properly I will have no choices and this is the ultimate condition to be aimed at.” This is the reverse of the behaviorist-existentialist prescription, which is that we should seek to increase our freedom by “conceptualizing as many different possibilities of action as possible.”

<blockquote>The ideal situation, on the contrary, is rather to be represented as a kind of ‘necessity’. This is something of which saints speak and which any artist will readily understand. The idea of a patient, loving regard, directed upon a person, a thing, a situation, presents the will not not as unimpeded movement but as something very much more like ‘obedience’. (331)

Will and reason then are not entirely separate faculties in the moral agent....As moral agents we have to try to see justly, to overcome prejudice, to avoid temptation, to control and curb imagination, to direct reflection. (332)</blockquote>

Great Art Is a Moral-Cognitive Accomplishment

“One of the great merits of the moral psychology which I am proposing is that it does not contrast art and morals, but shows them to be two aspects of a single struggle.” The existentialist-behaviorist view is tacit in what she calls “the familiar Kantian-Bloomsbury slogan” of “art for arts sake.” Murdoch finds such a view of art “intolerable.”

<blockquote>Goodness and beauty are not to be contrasted, but are largely part of the same structure. Plato, who tells us that beauty is the only spiritual thing which we love immediately by nature, treats the beautiful as the introductory section of the good. So that aesthetic situations are not so much analogies of morals as cases of morals. (332)</blockquote>

For the most part, contemporary theorists of art have banished the term “beauty” even from the domain of art. Perhaps that is because beauty points toward goodness in just the way Plato suggested, and intimations of such a connection must be suppressed if one is to remain metaphysically respectable. But what if respectability is here purchased at the cost of metaphysical cowardice?

The existentialist picture of choice is connected to a crypto-democratic view of art that can’t distinguish great art from the ordinary productions of ordinary artists, which exhibit the same distortions as our everyday consciousness.

<blockquote>Art presents the most comprehensible examples of the almost irresistible human tendency to seek consolation in fantasy and also of the effort to resist this and the vision of reality which comes with success. Success in fact is rare. Almost all art is a form of fantasy-consolation and few artists achieve the vision of the real. The talent of the artist can be readily, and is naturally, employed to produce a picture whose purpose is the consolation and aggrandisement of its author and the projection of his personal obsessions and wishes. To silence and expel self, to contemplate and delineate nature with a clear eye, is not easy and demands a moral discipline. A great artist is, in respect of his work, a good man, and, in the true sense, a free man. The consumer of art has an analogous task to its producer: to be disciplined enough to see as much reality in the work as the artist has succeeded in putting into it, and not to ‘use it as magic.’ The appreciation of beauty in art or nature is not only (for all its difficulties) the easiest available spiritual exercise; it is also a completely adequate entry into (and not just analogy of) the good life, since it is the checking of selfishness in the interest of seeing the real. Of course great artists are ‘personalities’ and have special styles; even Shakespeare occasionally, though very occasionally, reveals a personal obsession. But the greatest art is ‘impersonal’ because it shows us the world, our world and not another one, with a clarity which startles and delights us simply because we are not used to looking at the real world at all. (352)

    ...

    It is important too that great art teaches us how real things can be looked at and loved without being seized and used, without being appropriated into the greedy organism of the self. (353)

    ...

    If, still led by the clue of art, we ask further questions about the faculty which is supposed to relate us to what is real and thus bring us to what is good, the idea of compassion or love will be naturally suggested. It is not simply that suppression of self is required before accurate vision can be obtained. The great artist sees his objects (and this is true whether they are sad, absurd, repulsive or even evil) in a light of justice and mercy. The direction of attention is, contrary to nature, outward, away from self which reduces all to a false unity, towards the great surprising variety of the world, and the ability so to direct attention is love. (354)

    ...

    Good art “affords us a pure delight in the independent existence of what is excellent.” (370)

    ...

    “An understanding of any art involves a recognition of hierarchy and authority.... We surrender ourselves to [good art’s] authority with a love which is unpossessive and unselfish. (372)</blockquote>

I have reproduced these passages at length to show just how fertile is Murdoch’s use of art as a window onto the everyday challenges and aspirations that come with being the sort of creature who is attracted to what is excellent. This attraction is at the heart of our capacity for clarity (such as it is). In Platonic terms, the Good is that in light of which reality reveals itself, like the sun that illuminates the Earth.

Murdoch endorses this Platonic point while rejecting the existence of the Idea of the Good, if we mean that as “people used to think that God existed” (361). This statement occurs near the outset of the essay “On the Sovereignty of ‘Good’ Over Other Concepts.” Without fanfare, she takes it as a beginning point for her inquiry that human life has “no external point or telos” (364) and “there is no God” (365).

The Good/God Question

Here Murdoch becomes elusive and frustrating. I say that not as a believer who wishes to have a formidable secular thinker on side, but on grounds internal to her own thinking. Her entire argument through these three essays is teleological and makes frequent recourse to the idea of the transcendent as the necessary anchor for our aspiration to clarity. That aspiration is inseparable from our aspiration to excellence. The good, she says, is the “magnetic center of attraction” that provides direction and authority to our efforts. As a simple statement of psychological fact, this is recognizable and straightforward. Going deeper into any field of human endeavor reveals standards and degrees of excellence that were previously invisible to one as a novice. One’s standards get higher: there is little that is very good, and perhaps nothing that is perfect. Yet “the idea of perfection” produces “an increasing sense of direction” to any endeavor. “The idea of perfection moves, and possibly changes, us (as artist, worker, agent) because it inspires love in the part of us that is most worthy” (emphasis added). “The idea of perfection is also a natural producer of order. In its light we see that A, which superficially resembles B, is really better than B” (emphasis in original). And this occurs without us needing to have “the perfect” or “the good” pinned down. Indeed it can’t be pinned down. But this is not because the good is a mere projection of our preferences. It can’t be pinned down because the good “always lies beyond, and it is from this beyond that it exercises its authority” (emphasis in original). All of this from page 350.

Yet human life “has no external point or telos,” she says, bafflingly (364). It sometimes seems as though Murdoch is trying to re-invent the wheel while scrupulously abstaining from the use of a circle, and the result is flat contradiction. It will be said that her position has no contradiction it we take the good, and the idea of perfection, only as heuristics that carry some psychological utility. It is on such grounds that she entertains the efficaciousness of prayer and even sacraments. She is compelled to think about these practices by the rest of her argument. Let me briefly rehearse the steps by which she gets to a consideration of prayer.

Murdoch’s picture of the self is that of “an obscure system of energy out of which choices and visible acts will emerge at intervals in ways which are often unclear and often dependent on the state of the system in between moments of choice” (344). Hence the importance of training our attention, by way of forming “the system” and giving it a set, if you will. Given the naturally selfish tendencies of the system, and the limited efficacy of self-criticism and negative efforts of the will, it needs objects of love to pull it out of itself, the better to glimpse reality. The believer, she says, has an advantage in this. “The religious believer, especially if his God is conceived as a person, is in the fortunate position of being able to focus his thought upon something which is a source of energy” (345).

<blockquote>Prayer is properly not petition, but simply an attention to God which is a form of love. With it goes the idea of grace, of a supernatural assistance to human endeavor which overcomes empirical limitations of personality. What is this attention like, and can those who are not religious believers conceive of profiting by such an activity? (344)</blockquote>

Likewise, Murdoch sees the value of sacraments. “A sacrament provides an external visible place for an internal invisible act of the spirit” (356).

She quotes Wittgenstein with approval: “Not how the world is, but that it is, is the mystical.” This would seem to state an intuition that is perilously close to the idea that existence itself is a miracle.

Yet Murdoch labors valiantly to keep the God hypothesis at bay. The effort is worthwhile. Taking no shortcuts and availing herself not at all of the theological tradition, by her model she challenges the complacency of believers for whom received dogma may short-circuit the work of reflection by which religious experience (like experience altogether) is deepened. But at some point, her persistence in rejecting God, while invoking religious practices and relying on religious concepts, itself begins to look dogmatic. Or like a case of someone taking the principle of parsimony to the point of vacating her own logic. As Einstein said, “Everything should be made as simple as possible. And no simpler.”

Or perhaps hers is a case of intellectual scruples overdeveloped to the point of spiritual blockage, a prudish fear of flying. One wants to say to her, “My dear Iris. Live a little. Take a gamble.” One of the stock opinions of atheists is that belief in God is a consolation for the weak, who lack the courage to face a universe that does not care for human beings. But an inflection can occur in one’s perception (and it certainly feels like a case of seeing further, more clearly, in my own case) after which this looks not courageous but anxious and self-protective, in the way of a man whose dignity rests on making sure he is not duped. Or who wishes not to be in anyone’s debt and therefore refuses a gift for fear it will compromise him. This is ill-mannered.

As it happens, the occasion for my re-reading of these essays (I previously encountered them twenty years ago, as an atheist) was that my wife Marilyn and I hosted a Lent reading group devoted to them, for members of our parish. Toward the end of our sessions, Marilyn wondered if Murdoch’s theological inhibition may stem from a fear of being loved, because it entails being fully known.

Murdoch recognizes the psychological utility of an imagined “God” as an object of love. But what if this God really is other to the self, and loves us back? On Murdoch’s own account, it is in and through love that one perceives most fully. To be on the receiving end of this, to be fully known—even the number of hairs on one’s head—by a God that is the real source of Good is to take an existential risk that few modern thinkers can abide.

Yet such a hypothesis would make compelling a key intuition of Murdoch’s which, in her own treatment of it, remains mysterious. Namely, that a full and just attention – to anything at all – will reveal something to be loved. Even (as for St. Francis) the pus-filled wounds of the leper. This begins to make sense if the world and everything in it was made by an intelligence who acted out of love.

Suppose all is atoms, as the materialist says. That there should be such a thing as an atom is surely miracle enough: a nucleus, around which dance electrons that are particles and yet also waves, an ensemble of actuality that remains open to possibility. If substance itself is properly an object of wonder, gratitude and love, Murdoch‘s argument is completed."]]></description>
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    <title>Analogue Africa: Notes on the Anti-Colonial Imagination - YouTube</title>
    <dc:date>2026-04-15T22:38:42+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgDFi1A7Bpk</link>
    <dc:creator>robertogreco</dc:creator><description><![CDATA["For over three decades, Jeremy Harding has been one of the finest Anglophone commentators on African politics and culture. His new book "Analogue Africa: Notes on the Anti-Colonial Imagination" brings together essays on a varied and wide-ranging set of African (and some European) writers, painters, photographers and filmmakers who depicted and reimagined in the colonial encounter. The cast of characters includes Seydou Keïta, Sanlé Sory, Ernest Cole, Sarah Maldoror, John Akomfrah, William Kentridge and Binyavanga Wainaina.

Harding and the South African journalist Sean Jacobs join Equator to discuss "Analogue Africa" and the light it casts on the cultural history of postcolonial Africa."

[Book link:
https://www.versobooks.com/products/3220-analogue-africa ]]]></description>
<dc:subject>africa anticolonialism decolonization jeremyharding seanjacobs seydoukeïta sanlésory ernestcole sarahmaldoror johnakomfrah williamkentridge binyavangawainaina camus albertcamus film art painting photography ratikasokan anti-colonialism</dc:subject>
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