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The Farmhouse

Our Farmhouse runs on an organic life-cycle of by products inside the building, where one processes output is another processes input: Buildings create already a large amount of heat, which can be reused for plants like potatoes, nuts or beans to grow. A water-treatment system filters rain- and greywater, enriches it with nutrients and cycles it back to the greenhouses. The food waste can be locally collected in the buildings basement, turned into compost and reused to grow more food.Our Farmhouse is an attempt to reconnect people in the city with the process of growing our food.

FILE SÃO PAULO 2025: SYNTHETIKA – Flavia Mazzanti

Beyond My Skin

Flavia Mazzanti

FILE SÃO PAULO 2025: SYNTHETIKA – Arte e Tecnologia – Workshop
Festival Internacional de Linguagem Eletrônica

 

Beyond My Skin – Brasil

Beyond My Skin é um projeto interdisciplinar apresentado na forma de instalação interativa, performance híbrida e experiência em realidade mista (MR), que explora a relação híbrida entre corpos humanos e suas representações digitais por meio do uso experimental de diferentes tecnologias e mídias imersivas. O projeto já foi exibido em diversos espaços, como o Deep Space 8K do Ars Electronica Center (Linz, Áustria).

BIO

Flavia Mazzanti é uma artista multimídia que vive e trabalha entre Viena e São Paulo. Sua obra explora conceitos artístico-filosóficos relacionados a pós-antropocentrismo, entrelaçamento, corpo e identidade, com o interesse de oferecer perspectivas alternativas sobre nós mesmos e nosso entorno. Seus trabalhos têm sido exibidos internacionalmente, incluindo em países como Áustria, Suíça, Alemanha e Japão.

KOEN HAUSER

VLISCO HOMMAGE À L’ART
The Hommage à l’Art series was commissioned by Vlisco and it honours Vlisco’s art by placing their heritage of iconic drawings in the spotlight. These drawings were recreated into icons as gold statues in photographs inspired by Vlisco’s heritage and the women who wear Vlisco fabrics in a proud, almost regal way, as in royal portraiture.

FABIEN GIRAUD AND RAPHAEL SIBONI

THE OUTLAND
The Outland is a large black box, perched atop hydraulic legs, that bounces and dives unpredictably, shudders and shakes, tips and wobbles, to the point you might be afraid it will fall over. It is in fact a flight simulator ride, with no door and no external markings. As soon as you learn that, the box becomes more and more intriguing, inciting imaginary flight paths as you try to reconcile the visible movement of the box with what sort of vision the imaginary audience inside would be experiencing.

IRIS VAN HERPEN

АЙРИС ВАН ЭРПЕН
イリス ヴァン ヘルペン
Autumn/Winter 2019
This season van Herpen collaborated with American kinetic sculptor Anthony Howe, whose pieces are powered by the wind. His spherical Omniverse sculpture had pride of place in the Élysée Montmartre venue. The designer said she was compelled by the way its arching vertebrae, spinning on a curving axis, simultaneously expand and contract. Her finale dress was made in the image of Omniverse, with rotating wings constructed of aluminum, stainless steel, and feathers.

WIM VANDEKEYBUS & ULTIMA VEZ

MENSKE

Even the standing room only tickets have sold out, and the raging mass of disappointed kids looks like they may start a riot: the atmosphere before Ultima Vez’s performance is akin to a rock concert. Choreographer superstar Wim Vandekeybus’s company has toured the world with their trademark vocabulary of acrobatic, extreme, often violent movement, soaked in multimedia and energetic music. Menske (meaning approximately ‘little human’), their latest work, has all the typical flaws and qualities of classic Vandekeybus. On the conservative end of political intervention, Menske is an explosive concoction of brash statements about the state of the world today, a sequence of rapidly revolving scenes of conflicting logic: intimist, blockbuster, desperate, hysterical. The broad impression is not so much of a sociological portrait, but of a very personal anguish being exorcised right in front of us, as if Vandekeybus is constantly switching format in search of eloquence. Visually, it is stunning, filmic: a slum society falling apart through guerrilla warfare, in which girls handily assume the role of living, moving weapons. A woman descends into madness in an oneiric hospital, led by a costumed and masked group sharpening knives in rhythmic unison. A traumatised figure wanders the city ruins dictating a lamenting letter to invisible ‘Pablo.’ Men hoist a woman on a pole her whole body flapping like a flag. “It’s too much!” intrudes a stage hand, “Too much smoke, too much noise, too much everything!” And the scene responsively changes to a quiet soliloquy. At which point, however, does pure mimesis become complicit with the physical and psychological violence it strives to condemn? Unable to find its way out of visual shock, Menske never resolves into anything more than a loud admission of powerlessness.

Studio Smack

Tribe City
Hundreds of beings and dreamlike and dystopian elements inhabit the digital and autonomous works that are part of this project. “It’s a portrait of the masses,” summarise the artists, whose fascination with group dynamics, technological phenomena and the ego are expressed in Tribe with an eclectic selection of individuals who bring to life deeply recognisable social attitudes. Collective behaviour and manipulation are recurring themes in SMACK’s work, which often uses popular visual references and light-hearted aesthetics to present us with an uncomfortable reflection of who we are.

Robert Irwin

Double Blind

Double Blind is Irwin’s response to the characteristic features of the main gallery at the Secession. The room’s absence of windows makes it a neutral container for art, its hermetically sealed quality enhancing the impression of a massive, isolated volume. The grid structure of the ceiling and floor underscore the room’s austere appearance and lend it rhythm. The world outside nonetheless becomes tangible through the daylight streaming in from above. The changing intensity of light in the room allows visitors to sense different times of day and what are frequently rapid changes in the weather. The installation Double Blind consists of thirty room-high frames with translucent fabric stretched over them following exactly the lines of the grids that define the room and thus forming three volumes. Depending on where the viewer is standing and on the direction and intensity of the light, the appearance of the installation changes, as does that of the room itself. The door to the garden behind the Secession building stands open, allowing the viewer to see and sense the world outside.

CORNELIA PARKER

كورنيليا باركر
科妮莉亚·帕克
קורנליה פרקר
コーネリア·パーカー
코넬리아 파커
Корнелии Паркер

Studio A N F

Computer Visions 2
After more decades of trying to construct an apparatus that can think, we may be finally witnessing the fruits of those efforts: machines that know. That is to say, not only machines that can measure and look up information, but ones that seem to have a qualitative understanding of the world. A neural network trained on faces does not only know what a human face looks like, it has a sense of what a face is. Although the algorithms that produce such para-neuronal formations are relatively simple, we do not fully understand how they work. A variety of research labs have also been successfully training such nets on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans of living brains, enabling them to effectively extract images, concepts, thoughts from a person’s mind. This is where the inflection likely happens, as a double one: a technology whose workings are not well understood, qualitatively analyzing an equally unclear natural formation with a degree of success. Andreas N. Fischer’s work Computer Visions II seems to be waiting just beyond this cusp, where two kinds of knowing beings meet in a psychotherapeutic session of sorts[…]

VEGA ZAISHI WANG

베가 왕
维加王
ВЕГА ВАН
ALPHA LYREA
Beijing-based fashion designer Vega Zaishi Wang’s new Alpha Lyrae collection is very special. Silk dresses of her design were printed with galaxies, constellations, and nebulas, then backed with lightweight and flexible electroluminescent paper, making the garments glow. The name of the collection is quite clever: not only does it reference the space theme of the design, but Alpha Lyrae is the name of the brightest star in the constellation of Vega, which is also the designer’s first name.

CHRISTOPHER WARNOW

Immaterials – Data between visibility and invisibility
Christopher Warnow (1982) works as an artist, designer and programmer in Berlin and Würzburg, Germany. He is interested in the hopes and the trust we invest in digital data and – images. In installations, performances and workshops he utilizes generative strategies to examine our enthusiasm towards digital technologies and questions its grounds.

DDiArte

Dantes’s Dream
The ruins are in Porto city and we can see the Portugal shape on top of it. This is a critique of our environment and the financial situation in Portugal, Europe, and the world!

csilla klenyánszki

GOOD LucK SERIES
GOOD LUCK IS A PERSONAL RESEARCH FOR BALANCE AND THE INTERPRETATION OF IT. THE (SIMPLE) IMAGES OF THE SERIES TRY TO SHOW THE MOMENT OF THIS BALANCE, WHERE ALMOST EVERYTHING IS PERFECT AND STILL.

STINE DEJA

硬核,软体
艺术品向复杂而奇特的自然人体致敬,并向技术提供了进一步扩展其潜力的机。这种未来主义的身体重塑基于Deja的主要问题之一:在人工智能和技术采用的时代成为人类​​意味着什么?

Roman Signer

РОМАНА ЗИГНЕРА
Table with Rockets
NÉ EN 1938 EN SUISSE, ROMAN SIGNER EST MONDIALEMENT CONNU POUR SES PERFORMANCES « EXPLOSIVES ». DEPUIS 1973, IL CONÇOIT UNE ŒUVRE COMBINANT SCULPTURE, PERFORMANCE, PHOTOGRAPHIE ET DOCUMENTATION FILMIQUE. FASCINÉ PAR LA PUISSANCE DE LA NATURE, IL N’A DE CESSE DE L’EXPÉRIMENTER À L’AIDE D’ACTIONS D’UNE GRANDE FORCE POÉTIQUE, SOUVENT À LA LIMITE DU DANGER.