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Workshop | Create clay sculptures with OSC resident artists, PA System

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

PA System art collective invites everyone to help create part of the ongoing work Resolution (Mass of Clarity).
Within the Art in Use space at MOCA you are invited to sculpt a clay representation of a dream and make your imagination tangible.

Free

Vector Festival | Bio-Sonification: Non-Human Collaboration

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

Collaborate bio-sonically with non-human organisms around you! As part of Vector Festival, InterAccess is pleased to partner with MOCA Toronto to host a free workshop with Tosca Hidalgo y Terán. Drop by on Sunday, July 14 between 1-4pm on Floor 1 to listen to bio-data through various analogue synthesizers, plants, moss and mushrooms and experience […]

Free

What is The Extreme Self?

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

During the opening week of "Age of You", we present a conversation that delves into the exhibition’s key concern: data. How have we become our data, and how is our data becoming us? Artist Agnieszka Kurant and two of the exhibition’s curators, Shumon Basar and Douglas Coupland, are joined by moderator Joachim Johnson of HXOUSE to discuss our current and ever-accelerating technological moment.

Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Digital Security 101

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

This workshop takes a holistic approach to digital security, investigating what it means to find practices to protect yourself in a digital environment. This workshop, led by Digital Justice Lab’s Director, Nasma Ahmed, will explore how we relate to our virtual bodies, and what we can do to navigate and counteract components of hyper-surveillance through digital practices.

Artists on Artists: Shirin Fathi on “Age of You”

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

Shirin Fathi is an Iranian-Canadian artist whose work focuses on cultural changes in relation to gender identity. Through role-play and the use of cosmetics, masks and prosthetics, Fathi uses her own body as a subject to stage ambiguous and often marginalized identities. Fathi will lead a tour and discussion of "Age of You", with refreshments to follow.

MOCA’s Artists on Artists series is a programme where local artists are invited to discuss MOCA’s current exhibitions, or a single artwork, in any format or direction of their choosing.

Artists on Artists: Hannah Epstein on “Age of You”

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

Hannah Epstein works at the cross-section of textiles, experimental games and video art to reimagine the iconography of popular culture, highlighting the cultural negotiation between bottom-up (folk) and top-down (institutional) storytelling. By blurring the lines between traditional craft, popular culture and contemporary art, she aims to isolate and eliminate notions of hierarchy as archaic relics. Epstein will lead a tour and discussion of "Age of You", with refreshments to follow.

Digital Justice Lab Workshop: Mapping Digital Futures

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

In this workshop, we will reimagine the digital future of Toronto and what it could look like in 2040. Together we will build narratives about the future and map out local policy recommendations in relation to the city's Smart City plans.

Mapping Digital Futures is part of a series of workshops presented in partnership with Digital Justice Lab for "Age of You".

Art Toronto: Carlos Bunga

Art Toronto 255 Front Street West, Toronto, Ontario

Carlos Bunga’s talk takes place during a research trip to MOCA Toronto where he will create a
site-responsive installation on two floors of the museum, opening February 2020.

“Age of You” Drop-in Activity: Defying Facial Recognition

MOCA Toronto 158 Sterling Rd., Toronto

Think you can outsmart facial recognition? In this workshop, participants will design and construct masks and headpieces inspired by CV Dazzle, a project by artist Adam Harvey that provides information and tips for creating “looks” that can camouflage the face from face detection technology. Using elements such as asymmetry, tonal inverse and the concealment of certain facial features, you will be able to learn and test which design combinations are most effective in hiding from facial recognition technology.

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