Pint-Sized Conversations: Body of Work with Raoul Olou
Henderson Brewery 128A Sterling Rd, Toronto, OntarioRaoul Olou is a multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto. His work focuses on ideas of home, belonging and archiving the mundane.
Raoul Olou is a multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto. His work focuses on ideas of home, belonging and archiving the mundane.
Through a series of speculative design exercises, we will prototype and discuss what voice technologies might look like if we designed them in line with the central commitments of feminism: participation, agency, embodiment, equity, empowerment, plurality and justice.
Sophia Oppel is an artist and researcher whose work addresses the insidious positions of embedded power in networked infrastructures.
What does the internet look like — to you? MOCA invites you to consider this question while exploring "Age of You", an exhibition highlighting such themes as data, artificial intelligence, surveillance and the limitless capabilities of the internet.
The McLuhan Centre’s annual theme, "HotMessAge", explores how media and technology underlie today’s social and environmental crises while at the same time offering us the tools to address these challenges.
In this workshop, we will navigate the impact of datafication to form a better understanding of our “data bodies” and how they are used, stored and shared by governments and corporations.
"Archiving Eden: Exchange" presents x-ray images of 5,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species.
Believe the hype, folks: Sterling Road is jam-packed with tons of cool stuff - artist spaces, yoga studios, bookstores, restaurants, a brewery, clothing stores, galleries, and a lot more! Come join us for the 4th installment of Sterling Road BINGO for your chance to check them all out, and get special, behind-the-scenes looks at all of them.
In this talk, Matt Russo from SYSTEM Sounds will share some of the ways they've been able to generate sound and music using lunar data and what it means for the people of Earth.
"Archiving Eden: Exchange" presents x-ray images of 5,000 seeds — the smallest number required to preserve a single plant species.