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Eva van den Boogaard

Research Group: Situated Art, Design and Technology

‘Beauty lies in connecting different parties and creating equal opportunities. I believe in the power of kinship, collectiveness and critical thinking. ’

Eva van den Boogaard (Nijmegen, 1990, she/her) is a writer, lecturer and consultant based in Brussels. After completing her master’s degree in literary studies, she was a columnist for the Dutch literary magazine Hard//hoofd and published in various magazines and podcasts, such as Mister Motley, Echt Gebeurd, Memento and Tijdschrift Boekman.

In her writing, she mainly explores personal questions about feminism, education, kinship and critical theory. She currently works as a theory lecturer in the Photography, Film and Digital department at the St. Joost School of Art & Design in Breda.

At Caradt, Eva is project leader of the Artist In Residence programme of the PRE-LIFE consortium, of which Caradt is a partner. In this project, she aims to connect academic scientific research in the fields of geology, astronomy, physics and chemistry with artistic practices. By facilitating cross-pollination between science and art, the project provides space for new, speculative and aesthetic questions about the origins of life. She is also a teaching member in the Situated Art & Design research group.

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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‘People are the product of their relationships with their environment. It’s important to understand how technological developments influence these relationships.’

Michel van Dartel arrow

‘My practice explores how technology participates in relational embodied systems - how bodies, sensors, and materials co-compose stories of attention and response.’

Mark Meeuwenoord arrow

‘My practice is situated in between different actors, in this shape-shifting middle many things can happen.’

Tara Karpinski arrow

‘Imagination is the key to a strong inclusive society. Artistic work and situated design can contribute to a better understanding of the other.’

Jenny van den Broeke arrow

‘Investigating the potential of sensory augmentation to bridge the sensory gap between deaf and hearing.’

Michel Witter arrow

‘‘Understanding how creativity and imagination emerge from interactions with our environment will lead to improved innovation processes, tools and technologies.’’

Alwin de Rooij arrow

‘Through an interplay of design and research, the apt questions and necessary tools can be discovered and applied to each research project.’

Antal Ruhl arrow

‘Humans are atmospheric beings, particles, dust, in intimate cycles of exchange, actors with an incredible force.’

Annemarie Piscaer arrow

‘Could experimental sensory translation of art works improve their accessibility for sensory diverse exhibition audiences?’

Eva Fotiadi arrow

‘The tacit and embodied knowledge of practitioners about the complex reality of design can provide an important resource to innovate how we learn and teach’

Sarah Lugthart arrow

‘How can the notion of the ‘script’ be used in a situated design practice? ’

Ollie Palmer arrow

‘The ultimate goal is to provide people with the information, skills and tools that enable them to improve the quality of their daily lives.’

Simone van den Broek arrow

‘For me, the iterative design-research process is an exciting journey towards designs that can transform human consciousness.’

Danielle Roberts arrow

‘The essence of the situated, cinematic experience of dance lies in the mental interaction where the public becomes co-author.’

Noud Heerkens arrow

‘Getting comfortable with ambiguity enables designers to absorb feedback and use it to make better design choices.’

Gabri Heinrichs arrow

‘I look at the ways in which citizens can play an active role in shaping their cities, and how new media and technology can contribute to this.’

Barbara Asselbergs arrow

‘Power, control and chance play an important role in every creative process. I explore this complicated correlation.’

Michiel van Opstal arrow

‘Attention during interaction is personal, not a given fact.’

Misha Croes arrow

All people arrow

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