Rietveld Sandberg Research
ppl.60.melt.webp
MELT (Ren Loren Britton & Iz Paehr)

MELT (Ren Loren Britton & Isabel Paehr) study and experiment with shape-shifting processes as they meet technologies, sensory media and pedagogies in a warming world. Meltionary (derived from "dictionary"), is a growing collection of arts-design-research engagements that cooks up questions around material transformations alongside impulses from Trans* feminism and Disability Justice. Melting as a kaleidoscope like phenomena touches upon multiple topics at once: climate change, the potential for political reformulations, change over time and material transformation. MELT shares work in the forms of videos, installations, websites, lectures, workshops.

event
02
nov '23
Exhibited works, workshops and performances by the research fellows of 2022/2023

Curves of Inquiry is a Gerrit Rietveld Academie initiative that showcases the findings of nine artist-researchers who completed a fellowships trajectory in the previous academic year. Each of these projects is carried out in close collaboration with a department of the Rietveld Academie or Sandberg Instituut to foster relationships between educational programs, research activities, and societal issues.

event
21
mar '23
Workshop and Lecture Series by the Research Fellows 2022/2023

In the Fellows-in-Process series the research fellows of the Rietveld Academie and Sandberg Instituut 2022/2023 will share their process and findings with students and the Rietveld community at large. The series aims to aid interaction, while engendering meaningful conversations between the fellows, students and teachers of both institutes. To that end, events are open to Rietveld and Sandberg students and teachers. Below you can find all workshops. Note that for some workshops you have to sign up.

The Predicting Backwards Computer (PBC) engages AI (algorithmic instability / ancestral intelligence) to predict backwards in time as thriving to imagine otherwise histories. A speculative art-design research, the PBC breaks with algorithmic habits of aggregating and predicting from today‘s oppressions. Rather the PBC wonders: what would data for trans* and disabled lives be?