Does experience count as knowledge? Does art contribute to education? What might the local population expect from an art biennale held in their village? Can images act? Can you build knowledge while walking? Will collections feature landscapes in the future? Can machines understand humans? And can art help to make this happen?
Our work is post-disciplinary because it attributes equal value to different forms of knowledge: we blend specialist expertise and knowledge that has not yet been verified. It takes its impetus from varied practice contexts that emerge as we investigate research questions in close interaction with the relevant partners. Contributors to our projects include artists, curators, art scholars, jurists, pupils, regional economists, nuns, or people running an “off-space”.
Through our projects, we engage in speculative contemplation on the future in the face of current societal challenges. We are also committed to transparently communicating our research perspectives, making our processes accessible and, therefore, to promoting a research culture informed by open science principles.