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Hito Steyerl. ‘Why Games? Can an Art Professional Think?’

Wednesday 8 June 2016, 8:30 — 9:30 pm

— A presentation by Berlin-based artist as part of Harun Farocki's show

Photo by Tobias Zielony
Photo by Tobias Zielony
Artists
Hito Steyerl
Venue
Museo Tàpies
A project by
Fundació Antoni Tàpies and LOOP Barcelona
Contributor
Goethe Institute
Price
Free admission
Tickets & register

The activity has limited availability and requires previous registration. Please contact the Fundació Antoni Tàpies: 934 870 009 / activitats@ftapies.com

Language
English
Date and hours
Wednesday 8 June 2016, 8:30 — 9:30 pm Add to calendar
In the context of the exhibition "Harun Farocki. Empathy", Hito Steyerl will give an insightful presentation on video games, virtual simulations and the “generative fiction of autonomy”.

Berlin-based Hito Steyerl (Munich, 1966) is one of the most critically acclaimed artists working in the field of video, today. On the fence between cinema and the visual arts, her work spans reflections on globalization, image production and dissemination as well as the influence of technology on our daily life.

Once a student and close collaborator of the late German filmmaker Harun Farocki, she will give an insightful presentation on video games, virtual simulations and the “generative fiction of autonomy”.

Hito Steyerl

Artist, Speaker

1966, Munich

Hito Steyerl

Regarded as one of the most relevant contemporary artists in the field of Video art, Hito Steyerl (Munich, 1966) approaches current themes in her work, for instance the impact the proliferation of images and the use of the Internet and technology have on our lives. She uses these issues as a starting point for developing, not just through her video pieces but also through writing and essays, critical work about control, surveillance and militarisation, migration, cultural globalisation, feminism and political imagery, questions she believes have the capacity to create realities.
Employing humour as a tool for creating video narrations, and in a style that at times touches upon the everyday, the work she constructs enables an in-depth analysis of the way the current consumption of images and new forms of accessing information condition communication channels.
The work of Hito Steyerl, one of the representatives of the German Pavilion at the 2015 Venice Biennale, has been exhibited at various collective shows, for instance Documenta 12, in Kassel (2007), and the 13 th Istanbul Biennial (2013). Recent solo exhibitions include the one held in the Chicago Art Institute in 2012 and those organised by the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, and the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London, in 2014.

©Museo Reina Sofía

Last update May 5th, 2016