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Transmission Ecologies: Episode 8 - Adriana Knouf (Audio)
We are surrounded by, and infused with, electromagnetic waves. Radio. These waves pass through us, we don’t feel them, we don’t sense them without carefully arranged bits of wire and silicon. Let’s find a way to apprehend them. The works in this edition of Transmission Ecologies come from Adriana Knouf’s explorations of Hertzian space in recent years. Shortwave signals from thousands of kilometers away are mutated via tape loop disintegrations. EMF from our electronic devices becomes manifest. We eavesdrop on the occult machinic transmissions of satellites. Fragments of genetic codes bounce off the ionosphere over ham radio frequencies. We learn to absorb and be with these waves while simultaneously manipulating this very medium, modulating it towards desired queer futurities.
Adriana Knouf, PhD (US) works as an artist, writer, and xenologist. She engages with topics such as wet media, space art, satellites, radio transmission, non-human encounters, drone flight, queer and trans futurities, machine learning, the voice, and papermaking. She is the Founding Facilitator of the tranxxenolab, a nomadic artistic research laboratory that promotes entanglements among entities trans and xeno. Adriana regularly presents her artistic research around the world and beyond, including a work that has flown aboard the International Space Station. She was recently a Biofriction artist-in-residence at the Kersnikova Institute in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Adriana is currently an artist-in-residence at Waag in Amsterdam, the Netherlands as part of the Art4Med consortium. She lives and works in Amsterdam.
Curated by Afroditi Psarra, "Transmission Ecologies" explores the turbulent world of radio signals which propagate around us. Each show features a guest sound artist who broadcasts their radio experiments using EMFs, interference patterns from devices, HAM, RF field recordings, satellite signals, space astronomy research, etc. to formulate their interpretations, compositions, and translations of the invisible and unheard layer of telecommunication technologies.