Finissage: Holobiont. Life is Other
Angewandte Interdisciplinary
Lab
Program
17:30
Get together and exhibition tour with Thomas Feuerstein, Jens Hauser and Lucie
Strecker
18:30
Panel discussion and journal presentation
For the finissage of Holobiont. Life is
Other the contributions by international authors of the special volume of the journal Performance Research 25 (3), ‘On Microperformativity’
will be presented and discussed.
David Berry, Thomas Feuerstein, Karmen Franinović, Jens Hauser, Roman Kirschner, Gerald
Nestler, Klaus Spiess, Maja Smrekar, Lucie Strecker and K.T. Zakravsky discuss the significance of microperformativity in
their artistic practices.
In the context of the exhibition, a multimedia
wall newspaper presented artistic and theoretical contributions on the potential of microscopic physiological, chemical or
biotechnological processes, taken from the journal.
The aim of this issue is to explore both the epistemological and
aesthetic potential of the notion of microperformativity.
The term microperformativity denotes a current trend in theories
of performativity and performative artistic practices to destabilize human scales (both spatial and temporal) as the dominant
plane of reference and to emphasize biological and technological micro-aspects that relate the invisibility of the microscopic
to the intangibility of the macroscopic. Investigations into microperformativity redefine what art, philosophy, and the technosciences
now consider ‘body’ at a time when performance art is moving toward a generalized and ubiquitous performativity in art.
Microperformative positions ask how artistic methods can critically engage with technologies that manipulate life at the
microscopic and molecular levels, merging around bio- and digital media.
This issue includes contributions on biotechnological
performances, physiological processes and microgestures, traditional rituals and craft techniques, microperformativity from
the perspective of the natural sciences, and artistic engagements with algorithmic finance and high frequency trading.
The concept of ‘Microperformativity’ oscillates with the title of the exhibition Holobiont as a pioneering approach
by biologist Lynn Margulis: We are all holobionts – organisms entirely permeated by the biosphere, symbiotically interconnected
with other organisms. This concept calls into question the self-understanding of individual life and the division into subject
and object: Life is Other!
Orginaly published in 2020 during the Covid pandemic, the special volume ‘On Microperformativity’
has been reissued for the exhibition and will be presented and discussed publicly for the first time.
About
the exhibition:
We humans are colonized by bacteria, fungi and viruses, just as we colonize homes, cities and
environments. We also serve as hosts to ideologies, media and technologies.
The concept of the holobiont, introduced
in 1991 by biologist Lynn Margulis, describes us humans as a total living being permeated by the biosphere.
It explores
the self-conception of individual life, links us symbiotically with other organisms via our microbiome, disturbs the division
into subject and object and offends our usual concept of ego. Understanding the world as a holobiont reminds us: Life is other!
The social and psychological transformations of the pandemic and the consequences of the climate and energy crises have
brought to the forefront that life is first and foremost that of agencies other than human. Simple demarcations no longer
stand up to this dynamic.
‘We’ experience ‘us’ as transitory beings drifting between digital and molecular worlds and
sense the twisting of boundaries within us as the possibility of a new language beyond a symbolic distance from the world.
With the exhibition Holobiont. Life is Other, the Angewandte Interdisciplinary Lab presents bodies, environments, texts, media,
machines and biological organisms condensed into pictorial spaces – each of which represents a narrative about another life
and about the lives of others.