Arts & Media Archaeology summer school “Performing Media Histories”

04 May, 2024 by Nele Wynants | 0 comments

Arts & Media Archaeology summer school “Performing Media Histories”

Join us on a journey through the linked histories of media and performance. Experiment with old and new technologies, engage with leading experts and collaborate with contemporary artists.

The Arts & Media Archaeology team are eager to present the second edition of their summer school:

Arts & Media Archaeology: Performing Media Histories 

 

26-30 August 2024 

University of Antwerp City Campus 

Deadline: 15 May for early bird and non-EU citizens, 30 June for regular registration 

 

Join us on a journey through the linked histories of media and performance. Experiment with old and new technologies and explore the sensory dimensions of media. Engage with leading experts, collaborate with contemporary artists, and become part of a dynamic learning experience, questioning, experimenting, and critically analyzing the role of media in our past and present. 

 

This Summer School is aimed atresearch MA and PhDstudents and advanced scholars or artists in the field of Arts, Performance, Media and Cultural History. Successful completion can be awarded with 6 credits in accordance with the European Credit Transfer System (ECTS). 

 

Course content: 

 

·       Public keynote lectures byAndreas Fickers, Annie van den Oever, andErkki Huhtamo 

·       10 lectures by (inter)national experts 

·       5 practice-based and interactive sessions by artist-researchers 

·       2 field trips, a film screening, a social dinner, and a magic lantern performance 

 

You can find moreinformationand theregistrationlink on oursummer school website. Stay up to date on this summer school and future events through our newsletter, Facebook, Twitter and blog. 
 

This Summer School is organized in the framework of “Science at the Fair: Performing Knowledge and Technology in Western Europe, 1850-1914” (www.scifair.eu), a five-year research project coordinated byNele Wynants, funded by the European Research Council (ERC). 

Stay up to date with the IFTR Weekly Digest