Transmission in Motion

Documentation

“Music and ‘the fundamental nature of the universe'” – Christl de Kloe

Valery Vermeulen, mathematician and musician, provided us, in the second TiM seminar, with some interesting insights into what interdisciplinary work can look like. Amongst others, he presented a project where he makes music “using data stemming from space and deep space and astrophysical models” (“Mikromedas – Valeryvermeulen.Net” n.d.). In this blog, I will discuss two…

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“Horizon of beats as measuring tools” – Freja Kir

This piece of writing is the first in a series of short blog posts reflecting on current perspectives for measuring transmissions in motions. The writings specifically draw on references and inspiration shared from a seminar of similar title hosted by the University of Utrecht. Throughout these written reflections my focus will be set on unpacking…

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“Music is math, unfortunately” – Angelo Zinna

Despite the length of my relatively short-lived career as a student of literature, there is one recurring question I am confronted with on a regular basis that I have learned to answer without hesitancy. To those who inquire on whether investing years of one’s life reading (and, at times, rereading) novels, verse, and comics often…

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“The ethical magician” – T.P.

Following from the notion that agents do not create the technical essence from which technology evolves, but do create the techniques that steer it, Jason Tuckwell identifies art as the sort of work that deviates. For Tuckwell, art’s activity is located specifically in the creative process in which technē (skillfull action) works upon a general…

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“The Process Of Art As Wandering” – Anthony Nestel

How does art come to be? Aristotle reminds us that art is not an ontological problem, but rather a problem about causation. In his inspiring lecture Jason Tuckwell defines art as Techné – a skill or a technical capability to deviate processes of becoming. In contrast to poiesis – to make – techné doesn’t have…

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“Art, Technē, and the Question of Aura” – Dennis Jansen

During his recent TiM lecture, philosopher Jason Tuckwell argues that Walter Benjamin’s Marxist analysis of material production in “The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility” ([1936] 2008) is symptomatic of a more general tendency to reduce art solely to its mode of production, and thereby foregoes the question of how art…

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“Art without an aura: Techne in the digital age” – Angelo Zinna

Jason Tuckwell’s lecture “Agency and technē in creative practice” drew attention to the role of technical skill in the production of art, questioning whether it is worth revisiting the traditional view of “art as aesthetics” rooted in the Platonic concept of poesis. By juxtaposing the “particular” character of technē to the “universal” essence of nature,…

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“The question concerning technē” – Christl de Kloe

In the first Transmission in Motion seminar of this year called“Agency and Technē in Creative Practice,” Dr. Jason Tuckwell critiqued contemporary understandings of ‘the work of art’. He started by explaining that there are generally two ways of thinking about art which stem from the Greeks; the first is poiesis, where art is understood as…

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“Function of Exploration” – Aishwarya Kumar

In his 2012 TedEd talk, marine biologist David Gallo illustrates the idea of exploration by stating that we, as humans have ‘explored’ only 5% of what is in the oceans. By exploration, he means to “go peek and see what’s there” and uncover, reveal, bring to the front, what was invisible or unknown[1] and that,…

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Doing an Internship at Transmission in Motion

Transmission in Motion is always looking out to expand its network, exchange ideas and explore new perspectives on ongoing research. Master’s students who are interested in our work and would like to engage more closely with our projects have the possibility of undertaking an internship at Transmission in Motion and become part of our research…

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