art_intelligences_materiality

Abstract:

How does the materiality of the “body” shape thinking and being in the world? We take a wide view of the body, including human bodies, animal bodies, plants, and machines, but also institutions and structured processes.

In this seminar, we will start at the beginning of visual arts in cave paintings, read foundational texts about embodied perception, then move to machines and read key sections from James Bridle's book “Ways of Being” (2022), in which he uses his own artistic practice alongside natural and social sciences, philosophy, and speculation to investigate the shifting boundaries of what we call 'intelligence.' We will visit an exhibition on “more than human design” and look at water as a different materiality as a form of computation, both within a Western and a Chinese tradition.

Requirements:

  • 80% Presence
  • Participation in readings, group presentations, and discussions

Further Resources:

09:00–18:00, ZT 4.T37

On the birth of art, religion, and politics by neurologically modern humans, Upper Paleolithic (50'000-12'000 BC)

Lewis-Williams, David, E. Thomas Lawson, Knut Helskog, David S. Whitley, and Paul Mellars. 2003. “Review Feature: A Review of The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art by David Lewis-Williams.” Cambridge Archaeological Journal 13 (2): 263–79. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774303000155.

  • Overview, David Lewis-Williams, 263-267

Lewis-Williams, J. David. 2002. The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art. Thames & Hudson.

  • Chapter 7: An Origin of Image Making, read: 180-196 PDF

Watch: Werner Herzog: Cave of Forgotten Dreams, 89 min 2010, watch: 01:05:40 - 01:22:50

Afternoon

“Umwelt”: Relationship between subject and world

  • Uexküll, Jakob von. 1992. “A Stroll through the Worlds of Animals and Men: A Picture Book of Invisible Worlds (1934).” Semiotica 89: 319–91, Read, 319-32 (PDF)
  • Nagel, Thomas. 1974. “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” The Philosophical Review 83 (4): 435. (PDF)

09:00–18:00  ZT 3.K08

Analog institutions, AI systems, and Biology

  • Somaini, Antonio, ed. 2025. “A Theory of Latent Spaces.” In World through AI: Exploring Latent Spaces, with Quentin Bajac, Ada Ackerman, Noam Milgrom Elcott, and Tim Trombley. Jean Boite Editions. (read sections, I, II, IV, VI, VII) PDF
  • Bridle, James. 2022. Ways of Being: Beyond Human Intelligence. Allen Lane. (Epub)
    • all: Introduction
    • Group 1: Thinking Otherwise
    • Group 2: Seeing like a planet
    • all: Solidarity

Brian Eno and James Bridle on Ways of Being, 2022, 60 min

09:00–18:00  ZT 3.K13

Plant Intelligence

  • Volkart, Yvonne. 2025. Editorial. Plant Intelligence – Towards a Vegetal Aesthetics / Editorial. Plant Intelligence – Towards a Vegetal Aesthetics. June 29. https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.15768364. (read 1-10)
  • Fuller, Matthew. 2025. Days Are as Grass. On Karel Miler’s “Felt by Fresh Grass,” Plant Intelligence and Expanded Aesthetics. June 29. https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.15768436.

Afternoon

Exhibition: More than Human—Designing with Nature https://museum-gestaltung.ch/en/exhibition/more-human-designing-nature

Task: Choose one work. Make a short presentation: How is the non-human modeled? What materialities are involved? What role do they play?

official holiday, school closed

09:00–12:00  ZT 6.F01

Water/flow-based Computation

Bridle, James. 2022. Ways of Being: Beyond Human Intelligence. Allen Lane

  • Chapter 7: Non-Binary Machines

Vanessa Bosch

Ioana Vreme Moser

Mi, You. 2025. “A Different Endpoint Qian Xuesen and Cosmotechnics.” In Machine Decision Is Not Final: China and the History and Future of Artificial Intelligence, edited by Benjamin H. Bratton, Anna Greenspan, Amy Ireland, and Bogna Konior. Urbanomic.

Yuk Hui, 2017. Cosmotechnics as Cosmopolitics, e-flux, issue #86

Shi Qing (石青), Qian Xuesen and the Yangtze River Computer (钱学森和长江计算机), single-channel video, 2021.

Review, Feedback, End

  • art_intelligences_materiality.txt
  • Last modified: 2026/05/13 10:54
  • by fstalder@zhdk.ch