Art of Interference

Researcher, Writer, Interviewer, Editor, Audio Mixer

Role

3+ years, Fall 2022 - present

Duration

Ableton Live 11, Descript, Microsoft Suite

Tools

Art of Interference explores creative responses to climate change. We feature artists whose images, sounds, and performances encourage us to retune the relations of nature and technology. We ask climate scientists about their research and how it resonates with the interventions of contemporary artists. Additionally, we speak to activists, cultural critics, and policymakers about the need to develop a new ethics appropriate to our twenty-first century of planetary crises. In each episode, we discuss timely and untimely perspectives on how we, amid our human-made emergencies, may act in the world and allow this changing world to act on us.

Context

Site

Problem

Climate change is the ultimate wicked problem.  Adapting to our changing world and creating impact that will reverse the negative course we’re already on will require all of us. Our goal with this project is to flip the concept of interference on its head: to positively interfere with our existing conceptions of climate change, science, and art so that we might mend our relationship with the world around and within us.

How might we assemble experts to ground the abstract nature of climate science through the tangible nature of art to engage and educate the public?

Team

Dr. Lutz Koepnick

Lutz is the Max Kade Foundation Professor of German Studies and a Professor of Cinema and Media Arts at Vanderbilt University. His primary research is on contemporary art, film, and sound culture.

Dr. Tori Hoover

Tori holds a dual Ph.D. candidate in English and Comparative Media Analysis and Practice at Vanderbilt University. Her work explores how racialized and gendered histories of sonic media surface in today’s podcasting landscape. Tori produces for NPR’s “This is Nashville.”

Dr. Jennifer Gutman

Jennifer holds a dual Ph.D.English and Comparative Media Analysis & Practice. Her research and teaching interests include 20th- and 21st-century Anglophone literatures, history and theory of the novel, media studies, and environmental humanities.

Maren Loveland

Maren is a dual Ph.D. student in English and Comparative Media Analysis and Practice at Vanderbilt University. Her research focuses on the relationship between media, infrastructure, and the environment, using documentary and critical race theory.

Process

Product

Art of Interference  explores creative responses to climate change. We feature artists whose images, sounds, and performances encourage us to retune the relations of nature and technology, the human and the nonhuman. We ask climate scientists about their research and how it chimes with the interventions of contemporary artists. Additionally, we speak to cultural critics, scholars, and philosophers about the need to develop a new ethics appropriate to our twenty-first century of planetary crises. In each episode, we discuss timely and untimely perspectives on how we, amid our human-made emergencies, may act in the world and allow this changing world to act on us.

Our third season investigates different Earth materials—metals, minerals, rocks, soil, moss, or wood. How, we ask our guests, does organic and inorganic matter in all its elemental states and shapes inspire their artistic creativity? And in what way does their work challenge prevalent notions of agency and entanglement, care and co-dependency, control and disturbance? By pursuing these questions, we present contemporary art as a unique laboratory to reevaluate common notions of interference and what it means to be alive amid the ecological crises of our present. 

Our first two seasons featured artists whose work collaborated with water and air, or fourth and final season will discuss artistic practices that use fire as a medium to address the challenges of our over-heating planet.

Aside from the podcast’s regular seasons, we also offer our AoI Special Editions. They present thought-provoking conversations about the arts as transformative media of inquiry, the role of art within the landscapes of higher education, and the interplay between artistic research, climate studies, and technology development.

Art of Interference is produced at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN. It has been made possible with the financial support of “The Science Communication Media Collaborative “ of the College of Arts & Science.

Results

Art of Interference is currently airing season 3: Earth.

Check Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts for the latest episodes and the full catalogue of past seasons.