Global Art Forum 13: March Programme

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ART DUBAI, MADINAT JUMEIRAH MARCH 20-21, 2019

“SCHOOL IS A FACTORY?”



HELD UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF HIS HIGHNESS SHEIKH MOHAMMED BIN RASHID AL MAKTOUM, VICE-PRESIDENT AND PRIME MINISTER OF THE UAE, RULER OF DUBAI


GLOBAL ART FORUM

The Global Art Forum was launched by Art Dubai at its inaugural fair in 2007. The forum is supported by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. Featuring live talks guided by a curated theme, the Global Art Forum brings together a diverse line-up of participants, including artists, writers, curators, novelists, futurists, architects and technologists.

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“SCHOOL IS A FACTORY?”

The 2019 iteration of Global Art Forum is organised by Commissioner Shumon Basar, with Editor and Writer Victoria Camblin, and Curator and Writer Fawz Kabra as Co-Directors. This year’s two-day forum, the most significant of its kind in the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia, takes place on March 20-21 during Art Dubai at Madinat Jumeirah and is open to the public and free to attend. Following on from last year’s theme of automation, Global Art Forum 2019 unites a diverse cast of global minds – from renowned curators and critics to educationalists and entrepreneurs – under the theme of “School is a Factory?” to address some of the urgent challenges and opportunities facing education today. Some of the pressing questions posed throughout the Forum’s lectures, presentations and conversations will be: “What should education prioritise in the coming decade?” “How should humans be taught in the age of accelerated mechanisation?” “Is the notion of ‘learning for life’ just an opportunistic tagline?” “Will higher education escape the ghetto of elitism?” “Do past experiments in education have something to teach today?” and “Will we need humans to teach humans anymore, anyway?”

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DAILY SCHEDULE

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20 ART DUBAI, MINA A’SALAM, MADINAT JUMEIRAH

4:00-4:15pm WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION By Global Art Forum Commissioner Shumon Basar with Co-Directors Victoria Camblin and Fawz Kabra 4:15-4:35pm THE BAUHAUS SCHOOL (PART I): WHERE IN THE WORLD IS THE BAUHAUS? PREFACE Curator and Artistic Director of bauhaus imaginista Marion Schmidt von Osten A century after the foundation of the Bauhaus, we revisit the movement’s radical premise: to understand design as a social project, and to undertake a reform of art and design education as a step towards a reinvention of society. Considering case studies from the Bauhaus’ cosmopolitan reverberations, throughout the 20th century, and across many nations and cultures: how can we understand the legacy of the Bauhaus in light of the changing world of geopolitics? 4:35-4:55pm THE BAUHAUS SCHOOL (PART II): (WHAT) ARE WE STILL LEARNING? DISCUSSION Independent Researcher and Curator Maud Houssais and Curator and Artistic Director of bauhaus imaginista Marion Schmidt von Osten. Hosted by Global Art Forum Co-Director Victoria Camblin A look at the Bauhaus’ non-European remit – in India, Morocco, and elsewhere – offers an opportunity to re-contextualise its impact today. How can we channel its spirit to reimagine culture as a social project in a contextually relevant way? And what would we need to build – or tear down – in order to foster results?

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4:55-5:20pm WHAT IS “LABORATORIUM”? LECTURE Researcher, Art Critic, Editor and Curator Barbara Vanderlinden What is a laboratory? What is experimentation? How do these tools facilitate artistic and scientific research – and how do such specialised work methodologies translate across disciplines, and traverse professional borders to access a general audience? Can art and science work together to progress a public dialogue? This lecture presents a curatorial perspective. 5:20-5:45pm YOUR RESEARCH IS SHOWING! DIALOGUE Founder and Artistic Director of Pivô and Independent Curator Fernanda Brenner and Researcher, Art Critic, Editor and Curator Barbara Vanderlinden Interdisciplinary and research-based cultural projects face particular questions when they enter and aim to serve in a public sphere. From the built environment to community support, what are the ideal conditions for – and the ideal outcome of — sharing research findings? 5:45-6:00pm BREAK 6:00-6:30pm SCHOOL IS A LABORATORY: R&D AT THE INSTITUTION VIDEO LECTURE Curator, Writer and Consultant Victoria Ivanova Experimentation is integral to an institution’s progress, innovation and growth. In industry, technological research and development is essential for remaining viable and competitive. How can art institutions respond to today’s accelerated technology? What can we learn from historical and contemporary interactions of art and technology in the field? And how are contemporary art institutions using pedagogical models to innovate? 7


6:30-7:30pm SCHOOL IS THE ESTABLISHMENT DISCUSSION Director of Art Jameel Antonia Carver and Director of The Showroom London Elvira Dyangani Ose. Hosted by Curator of Sculpture Center Sohrab Mohebbi Why does education continue to be an urgent topic (and department) within the art establishment? Art institutions, from private and public collecting museums to the Kunsthalle and the Biennale, continue to emphasise the importance of education. What are the critical issues and challenges institutions are responding to today? How have their mandates been articulated and how have they organised their educational missions? 7:30-8:00pm SCHOOLS AND FACTORIES LECTURE Associate Curator of KW Berlin Tirdad Zolghadr The global expansion of today’s art-educational panorama is high-speed, to say the least, but also surprisingly methodical and tidy. At first glance, the explosion of BFAs, MFAs, artist PhDs, semi-formal setups and auto-didactic experiments may seem like sheer chaos. But in truth, it is persistently invested in the expansion of a singular discourse, market and infrastructure we call “Contemporary Art”. In other words, we already have a factory on our hands. The only question is how to make use of it. If you prefer to turn back the clock, back to something more small-scale and personal, then you must smash the machines immediately. On the other hand, if you are happy (more or less) with reproducing the art world, one generation at a time, then you can kick back and relax. It’s looking good. Finally, if you wish to tackle the agenda of art altogether, and harness it for more important ends, even then, the factory model has much to offer. Even then, the efficiency, depersonalisation, automation, scalability and disenchantment of a factory floor can be a promising blueprint for education today.

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THURSDAY, MARCH 21 ART DUBAI, MINA A’SALAM, MADINAT JUMEIRAH

4:00-4:15pm WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION By Global Art Forum Commissioner Shumon Basar with Co-Directors Victoria Camblin and Fawz Kabra 4:15-4:45pm SWAMP IS A SCHOOL? DOUBLE ACT Artists and Educators Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas “Hope and the future for me are not in lawns and cultivated fields, not in towns and cities, but in the impervious and quaking swamps,” wrote Henry David Thoreau of the wetlands (of Massachusetts, USA). How can the swamp, as a locus of imagination, possibility, and invisible symbiosis between life forms and between humanity and its constructions, foster our thinking today, in order to serve a future of possibility? How can we learn from the swamp to argue for conviviality (living together) and sympoiesis (making together) in imagining the future and adapting to imminent unknowns? 4:45-5:45pm SCHOOL IS THE COMMONS? DISCUSSION Designer Amir Berbić and Independent Curator, Editor and Writer Nataša PetrešinBachelez. Hosted by Global Art Forum Co-Director Fawz Kabra The concept of the commons as a space of collectivity and community can create new ways of learning and sharing of experience. The commons can also emerge out of states of emergency when the governing infrastructure is no longer viable. What does it look like when the space of the commons flourishes at times of chaos and consequently subverts accelerated industry? How have architecture design and curatorial practices used the commons to establish new ways of co-learning and coworking in rapidly changing times? 9


5:45-6:00pm BREAK 6:00-6:20pm FROM RAS AL KHAIMAH TO RUWAIS, A DECADE OF LEARNING DESIGN PRESENTATION Co-Founders of Bon Education and Bon for Work Anna and Chris Batchelder What is the programming language of education? How do you get teams, at school or in the work place, to learn to work smarter together? What place does rock music have in a lesson plan? And what happens when you unleash 4,000 students to solve your organisation’s toughest challenges? In this interactive talk, learning designers Anna and Chris Batchelder share their universal principles of learning design gathered from a decade of work in the UAE. 6:20-6:40pm ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, REAL EDUCATION? A TAXONOMY DISCUSSION Innovation Leader of GEMS Education Rohan Roberts We live in a world of increased automation and ubiquitous A.I. Smart agents and cognifying technologies will continue to impact society. How can we classify the Artificial Intelligence currently in existence with a view to transforming science and art education - and better preparing humanity for a future of accelerating change? 6:40-7:00pm DISCUSSION Co-Founders of Bon Education and Bon for Work Anna and Chris Batchelder and Innovation Leader of GEMS Education Rohan Roberts. Hosted by Global Art Forum Co-Directors Victoria Camblin and Fawz Kabra A follow-up to the two previous sessions, delving into the issues facing education in the region today.

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7:00-8:00pm LEARNING FROM MACHINE LEARNING DISCUSSION Artist Cécile B. Evans and Co-Founder of Mirai Christine Nasserghodsi. Hosted by Global Art Forum Commissioner Shumon Basar Our automated world - where we speak to digital assistants and manoeuvre through space while our faces are recognised by ubiquitous cameras - has been made possible because of millions of hours of machine learning, whereby large data sets of meaningful information are inputted to establish protocols that seem “human-like”. What kind of education is this? What does it, in turn, teach us about ourselves? And what can humans learn from the strange processes of teaching machines about the world as it is, or, as it should be?

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Cécile B. Evans, Installation view of Sprung a Leak in “Hello World—For the Post Human Age” (Contemporary Art Gallery, Art Tower Mito, 2018) Photo: Shintaro Yamanaka Photo courtesy the artist and Galerie Emanuel Layr 12


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CONTRIBUTORS

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COMMISSIONER Shumon Basar is a writer, curator and cultural critic. He is Commissioner of Global Art Forum in Dubai; Editor-at-large of Tank magazine; Contributing Editor at Bidoun magazine; Director of the Format programme at the AA School; part of Art Jameel’s Curatorial Council; and a member of Fondazione Prada’s Thought Council. His last book, co-authored with Douglas Coupland and Hans Ulrich Obrist, was “The Age of Earthquakes: A Guide to the Extreme Present.”

CO-DIRECTORS Victoria Camblin is a writer, editor, art historian and curator of public programming. In June 2018 she was appointed Executive Editor of 032c magazine, a Berlin-based contemporary culture publication where she served as editor from 2006-2013. In the interim she served as Editor and Artistic Director of ART PAPERS, a 38 year-old arts magazine and non-profit based in Atlanta, Georgia. Her writing has appeared in such publications as Artforum, Art in America, and Texte zur Kunst, in addition to a number of exhibition catalogues and artists’ books, and she has organized and contributed to public talks, symposia, programming, and exhibitions in Europe, in the Middle East, and in the South-Eastern United States. Camblin attended Columbia University in New York and the University of Cambridge (UK). She is a recipient of DAAD and Rauschenberg fellowships, and was the 2009-2012 Leslie Wilson Major Scholar at Magdalene College, Cambridge. Fawz Kabra is a curator and writer. She has organized exhibitions and symposia at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, New York; The Palestinian Museum, Birzeit; BRIC, Brooklyn; Art Dubai Projects; and The Armory Show, New York. She was Assistant Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York (2014-2016). She edited the reader and exhibition catalogue “No to the Invasion/Breakdowns and Side Effects” (CCS Bard/Barjeel 2017). Her writing has been published in ART PAPERS, Ocula, Canvas, Guernica and Ibraaz. Fawz earned a Master’s from the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College (2013). She lives and works in Brooklyn.

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SELECTED SPEAKERS Anna and Chris Batchelder are Co-Founders of Bon Education and Bon for Work. Like architects and designers, Bon Education creates education programs for corporates, governments, SMEs and non-profits. Their client portfolio includes organizations such as: Google, Meydan Racecourse, Dubai Institute of Design and Innovation, Godolphin, Jumeirah Group, Microsoft, Expo 2020 Dubai, CISCO, Mubadala and many government entities. Amir Berbić is a Professor and Chair of Graphic Design at the University of Illinois at Chicago’s School of Design. His work is featured in Design Issues, Visual Communication journal, Print, Graphis, Society of Typographic Arts, World Design Congress, and included in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Fernanda Brenner is an independent curator. In 2012 she founded Pivô, a nonprofit contemporary art space in São Paulo, where she serves as artistic director. Brenner recently curated the group shows Nightfall at Mendes Wood DM, Brussels along with Erika Verzutti and Milovan Farronato and Black Box at Fundação Iberê Camargo in Porto Alegre, Brazil. She is a contributing editor of Frieze, and her writings have appeared in many publications and catalogues such as Artreview, Mousse, Terremoto, Cahiers D’Art and The Exhibitionist. Antonia Carver is Director of Art Jameel. She oversees the organisation’s work in education, heritage and the arts, including two new institutions – Jameel Arts Centre, Dubai, and (opening in 2020) Hayy: Creative Hub, Jeddah. Cécile B. Evans is an American-Belgian artist living and working in London. Her work examines the value of emotions in contemporary society, in particular as they come into contact with technological and physical structures. Recent selected solo exhibitions include Chateau Shatto USA, Tramway UK, mumok Vienna, Castello di Rivoli, Emanuel Layr Galerie and more. Her work has also been included amongst others at Haus der Kunst, Mito Art Tower, Renaissance Society Chicago, the 9th Berlin Biennale, 20th Sydney Biennale, Louisiana Museum and many more. 17


Maud Houssais was the Research Curator of the exhibition project bauhaus imaginista curated by Marion von Osten and Grant Watson (2017-18). In 2017, she co-curated with Morad Montazami and Yasmina Naji the exhibition Modernités Nomades on the history of the gallery of modern art l’Atelier (1971-91) at Kulte Gallery. Victoria Ivanova is the Co-Founder of Izolyatsia, Real Flow and Bureau for Cultural Strategies and currently a researcher in collaboration with the Serpentine Galleries and London South Bank University. Her core focus is on systemic and infrastructural conditions that shape socio-economic, political and institutional realities. To this extent, Ivanova develops innovative approaches to policy, finance and rights in the sphere of contemporary art and beyond. Sohrab Mohebbi is a Curator at Sculpture Center. He previously was an Associate Curator at REDCAT where he organized solo exhibitions with Dave Hullfish Bailey, Tamara Henderson, John Knight and Falke Pisano, among others. He is a corecipient of The Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award for the exhibition Hotel Theory and 2012 recipient of Arts Writers Grant. Christine Nasserghodsi is the Co-Founder of Mirai, a Dubai-based innovation consultancy and the former Head of Innovation Strategy and UAE Vice President at GEMS Education. Christine founded the UAE’s first maker event in 2012, which has grown into a global year-long programme co-run by GEMS and Singularity University. She is also a doctoral candidate in Organizational Learning at UPenn with a focus on cross-cultural leadership for innovation. Elvira Dyangani Ose is Director of The Showroom, London. She is affiliated to the Department of Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths and Fondazione Prada’s Thought Council. Previously, she served as Senior curator of Creative Time, Curator of the eighth edition of the Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art and Curator of International Art at Tate Modern. Marion Schmidt von Osten is a curator, researcher and writer. She has been working as a Curator and Artistic Director of bauhaus imaginista (2018–2019) 18


since 2014, and was joined by Grant Watson as co-curator and artistic director in 2016. Her exhibitions, films and publications reflect radical art and architecture movements within and beyond Europe with a focus on pedagogy, decolonisation, migration and neoliberal economies. She wrote her PHD in Fine Arts at Lunds University Sweden with Sarat Maharaj. She is a founding member of the Center for Postcolonial Knowledge and Culture and the artist collectives Labor k3000 and kleines postfordistisches Drama, Berlin. Publications include Transcultural Modernism (2013). Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez is an independent curator, writer and editor. She has curated projects and exhibitions for the Times Museum, Guangzhou; Sursock Museum, Beirut; Jeu de Paume, Paris; and Centre Pompidou, Paris. Between 2014 and 2017 she was the Chief Editor of the publishing platform L’Internationale Online. She is Curator of the Contour Biennial 9: Coltan as Cotton. Rohan Roberts is the Director of the Dubai Science Festival. He is a serial entrepreneur and co-founder of several global organisations including, Intelligent Optimism, Café Scientifique Dubai and Awecademy. He is the Innovation Leader at GEMS Education (the world’s largest private education provider) where he is responsible for promoting Innovation Strategy Planning and Entrepreneurship across over 40 institutions of learning in the UAE and rest of the MENA region. Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas are artists, educators, and researchers working at the Art, Culture and Technology Program at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In addition, they are visiting professors at VU in Vilnius, VDU in Kaunas, NABA in Milan, luav in Venice and CAFA in Beijing. The duo combine the disciplines of new media, urbanism, social science, ecology and pedagogy into an integrated artistic practice. Their work has been exhibited at the São Paulo, Berlin, Moscow, Lyon, Gwangju, Busan, Venice biennales; Manifesta and documenta. In 2018 they curated the “Swamp pavilion” – a future learning environment at the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale. Barbara Vanderlinden is a researcher, art critic, editor, and curator. Most recently, Barbara curated A 37 90 89, Beyond the Museum at MHKA, Museum 19


of Contemporary Art in Antwerp. She served as Professor of Exhibition Studies and Director of the Exhibition Laboratory at the University of the Arts Helsinki in Finland where she organised the Laboratory of Hearing. In 1999 she co-curated Laboratorium with Hans Ulrich Obrist, the seminal exhibition about the studio and laboratory in contemporary art. Tirdad Zolghadr is a curator, writer and the Artistic Director of the Summer Academy at Zentrum Paul Klee in Bern and Associate Curator at KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin.

Special thanks for providing the stage furniture 20


Cover Image Artist Josef Albers with his class at Black Mountain College, shot for Life magazine Š Photo by Genevieve Naylor / Corbis via Getty Images


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