Public lecture, 7:00 p.m.

 

Location: Aula 3rd floor, Academy of Fine Arts in Prague

 

Free admission, no registration required

 

Back to the Future School: Anticipating Tomorrow’s Arts & Humanities Education 

New educational platforms are often born of a commitment to the principle that for original ideas to be presented to a larger audience, they do not have to wait for the slow process of verification and approval built into educational and research institutions. Today’s educational platforms are conceived and built online. Despite their shortcomings, the ever-growing reach of planetary computation can provide the basic infrastructure for the creation of new educational institutions. With humanities, art, and social science departments around the world caught in a losing fight in the crossfire between the dominant poststructuralist ideologies and pragmatist neoliberal administrations, it becomes clear that the foundations and aspirations of new institutions will need to be in line with the kind of new left which is comfortable with confronting complexities. These new institutions ought to fearlessly accept that some components of the base capitalist structure, if combined with emancipatory superstructures, can provide practical ways for the eventual exit from capitalism.

 

MOHAMMAD SALEMY is an independent Berlin-based artist, critic, and curator from Canada. He holds a BFA from Emily Carr University and an MA in Critical Curatorial Studies from the University of British Columbia. He has shown his works in Ashkal Alwan’s Home Works 7 (Beirut, 2015), Witte de With (Rotterdam, 2015), and “Robot Love” (Eindhoven, 2018). His writing has been published in e-flux journal, Flash Art, Third Rail, Brooklyn Rail, Ocula, Arts of the Working Class and Spike. Salemy’s curatorial experiment “For Machine Use Only” was included in the 11th edition of Gwangju Biennale (2016). Together with Patrick Schabus, he forms the artist collective Alphabet Collection. Salemy is the Organizer at The New Centre for Research & Practice.

 

Class of Interpretation (COI) is a joint educational project between Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary, Vienna (TBA21), and the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague (AVU).The program offers ten semesters (2018–2023) of rigorous academic sessions including both open public lectures and semi-public seminars. A core group of twenty-five students have been selected for these semi-public seminars, but COI has the capacity to extend an invitation to more guests from the general public. It proposes to form an enclave of embodied learning, which will further a deep exploration of some crucial themes of contemporary art, including ecology, philosophy, and politics with international and local experts. COI is curated by Boris Ondreička (TBA21) and Václav Janoščík (AVU). More information: www.tba21.org/coi