‘My practice explores how technology participates in relational embodied systems - how bodies, sensors, and materials co-compose stories of attention and response.’
My practice explores how technology participates in relational embodied systems – how bodies, sensors, and materials co-compose stories of attention and response. The question of what counts as kin guides this exploration, asking how we might create with, rather than merely through, technological systems.
Mark Meeuwenoord (member of Polymorf) is a media artist and musician whose practice spans music and sound design, multisensory and installation design, and artistic research. His work integrates critical philosophical inquiry with hands-on, practical experimentation, exploring ways to facilitate a more-than-human condition. Mark’s artistic focus lies in engaging audiences through fully embodied, immersive experiences and developing multi-sensory strategies for storytelling and experience design.
He is a senior lecturer at Avans Communication and Multimedia Design in Breda and has been a research fellow in various programs, including the Sundance New Frontier Storylab, the MIT & IDFA DocLab Immersive Network Research & Development Program, The Sense of Smell (a collaboration between Polymorf, IFF, and Avans), and the Lectorate of Robotics & Sensoring Avans University of Applied Sciences. Mark currently serves as researcher in Robotics and Art at Avans focussing on Artificial Kinship – Care .
His work has received multiple awards, including the Award for Creative Technology at IDFA DocLab and the Sheffield DocFest Alternate Realities Audience Award, and has been presented internationally at festivals and exhibitions such as SXSW (US), PAMCUT (US), Holland Festival (NL), BFI (UK), STRP Festival (NL), Mozilla Fest (UK), Sheffield Doc/Fest (UK), FOST (US), Sundance (US), IDFA DocLab (NL), Nederlands Film Festival (NL), Fak’ugesi (ZA), Hong Kong Arts Centre (HK), FILE Fest (BR), and Future Forum (DXB).
Artificial Kinship
Artificial Kinship is an innovative artistic research project that explores the synergy between art, technology, and care. Building on experience with embodied artificial intelligence (AI) in robotic art, the project applies this knowledge to redefine the complex and dynamic interactions within the care sector.
Research Group: Situated Art, Design and Technology
Living in cities developed around data and acting within the inscrutable structure of our techno-society demands art and design that can help understand how we relate to these rapidly changing surroundings and to reflect on that relationship. The research group Situated Art, Design and Technology responds to this exigency by fostering a situated turn in art and design through a diverse portfolio of interdisciplinary research projects in partnership with academic and cultural partners, as well as with government and industry.
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