For its eighth annual theme the cx centre for interdisciplinary studies investigates excess as a distinctive feature of our neoliberal economic system, while also addressing positive aspects of boundary-expanding intemperance that can be understood as refusing the strategies of rational and economic exploitation. To inaugurate the new annual theme, an international lecture series brings together approaches from art, design and the sciences that deal with excessive processes and behavioural forms as well as their consequences. The contributions will discuss the excessive demands made on the individual by constant networking, the flood of information, and self-optimizing, examining the cultural problematic of administering things that have accumulated beyond moderation. In addition, they will analyse the complex relationship between affluence and scarcity, highlighting possible ways out of the excesses of growth as well as the potentials of ecstatic transgressions.
The excessive seems to be inherent to capitalism. It is famously based on growth, which is meant to be guaranteed by constantly promoting new desires and an increase in demand, with a tendency to chronic overproduction. The decadent proliferation of things and optimizing bodies for efficiency finds its counterpart in the current exponentially increasing circulation of information, data, and affects by means of digital communication technologies. In media excesses, messages compete for interpretive authority and for the attention of their recipients,and this struggle triggers an escalation of further subtle dynamics of always trying to outdo the other. As a consequence of such excesses, academics and artists have increasingly begun to diagnose states of physical and mental overload and exhaustion that are no longer related solely to the individual and the body, but that can by now be understood as a planetary phenomenon, in view of dwindling energy sources as well as the destruction and pollution of the Earth. In artistic and academic disciplines, however, the first exit strategies are also beginning to emerge. Some of these strategies seem not least to be examining the extent to which the possibility of resistance is inherent in the excessive itself.
Interdisciplinary lecture series
Venue A.EG.15 (historical auditorium), Akademiestr. 2, with the exception of the first lecture on 23.10.2019,
which will take place in the auditorium in the annex building (room E.EG.28), Akademiestr. 4.
Time 7pm
in cooperation with the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, LMU Munich
Wednesday 23.10.2019: Excess and Devaluation
Amy Franceschini, Jason W. Moore, Silvia Federici (via Skype)
Tuesday 29.10.2019: Consumption as Obsession
Gerda Reith, Ashkan Sepahvand
Wednesday 20.11.2019: Excess as Capitalist Principle
Vandana Shiva
Tuesday 26.11.2019: (Im)Materials of Excess
Hans Block, Moritz Riesewieck
Wednesday 3.12.2019: Too much stuff?
Sharon Macdonald
Tuesday 10.12.2019: Excess, Gender, Racialization
Luiza Prado de O. Martins, Amber Jamilla Musser
Wednesday 8.01.2020: Excess and Ecstasy
Gisèle Vienne, Jules Evans
Thursday 23.01.2020: Affluence and Scarcity
Cooking Sections (Daniel Fernández Pascual und Alon Schwabe), Jeremy Till
With its seventh annual theme "Human after Man", the cx centre for interdisciplinary studies explores how the notion of the human is currently being reconfigured in the arts and sciences. It attempts to bring a decolonial perspective into a dialogue with approaches that see the most pressing impetus for a redefinition of humanity above all in the phenomena of climate change, the current mass extinction, or in the ever-tighter fusion of the living and the technical.
Please find the annual theme "Human after Man" documented below:
Introduction annual theme (concept text)
Interdisciplinary lecture series "Human after Man" (video recordings)
Project classes of the guest professor keyon gaskin
Seminars WS 2018/19 and SoSe 2019
For further study please refer to the publication (will be released 2020)
With its sixth annual theme "Politics of Emotion/Power of Affect", the cx centre for inter-disciplinary studies addresses the theme of affect and emotions as a meaningful category for analyzing the social. It investigates the influence of mediated emotions and affective attunements, potential new balances of power through the mechanization of affect, as well as current artistic and design-based reflections and deconstructions of emotional regimes.
Please find the annual theme "Politics of Emotion/Power of Affect" documented below:
Introduction annual theme (concept text)
Interdisciplinary lecture series (video recordings)
Project class of the guest professor Cécile B. Evans and workshop with Peng! Kollektiv
Seminars Winter Term 2017/18 and Summer Term 2018
For further study please refer to the publication (will be released 2020)
The fifth annual theme of the cx centre for interdisciplinary studies "Hybrid Ecologies" explores which consequences the contemporary notion of ecology might entail for the rethinking of community and for artistic and design practices.
Please find the annual theme "Hybrid Ecologies" documented below:
Introduction annual theme (concept text)
Interdisciplinary lecture series "Hybrid Ecologies" (video recordings)
Project classes of the guest professors John Jordan & Isabelle Fremeaux (Labofii) and Simon Starling
Seminars WS 2016/17 and SoSe 2017
For further study please refer to the publication (will be released 2019)
The cx centre for interdisciplinary studies examines in its fourth annual theme "Real Magic" the contemporary reality of the magic and its emergence in the arts, sciences and everyday culture.
Please find the annual theme "Real Magic" documented below:
Introduction annual theme (concept text)
Interdisciplinary lecture series "Real Magic" ( video recordings)
Project classes of the guest professors Melanie Bonajo and Mariechen Danz
Seminars Winter Term 2015/16 and Summer Term 2016
For further study please refer to the publication (diaphanes 2018)