
Join us on 15 May at Framer Framed for Slow AI: Practices of Thinking, Sensing, and Refusing—a day-long symposium reimagining artificial intelligence through artistic practice and the lenses of ethics, relationality, and refusal. The event is free but we need to keep an eye on attendance since we have a limited capacity, so please register here.
Over the past year, the Slow AI research project has unfolded across a working group and the Material Playgrounds, collaborative sessions exploring divination, somatics, sound, storytelling, and more. This gathering marks a moment to reflect on the first year of the project: to think together about AI not as an inevitable force or a tool to be optimised, but as a cultural and relational object that entangles with our ecological, political and cultural environments.
Structured around three thematic blocks, the symposium pairs brief presentations with extended collective conversations—bringing together artists, theorists, designers, and technologists working across disciplines and tempos.
The program features contributions by Elki Boerdam, Sofía Fernández Blanco, Dorin Budușan and Mariana Lanari, with dialogues including Carlo De Gaetano, Janine Armin, Zachary Formwalt, Flavia Dzodan, Pablo Nuñez Palma and Christian Olesen. The event will be moderated by Sabine Niederer, Mariana Fernánadez Mora and Patricia de Vries.
The day will close with the launch of Restless Grounds: Speculative Futures on Algorithmic Technologies, a publication and podcast exploring slowness as a speculative, critical, and embodied mode of engaging with algorithmic technologies.
Launched in Jan 2024 with support from the Centre of Expertise Creative Innovation (CoECI) Partnercall voor Experimenten, Slow AI began as a collaboration between the Visual Methodologies Collective (AUAS) and the Algorithmic Cultures Research Group (Rietveld Sandberg Research), with additional support from the ARIAS Artificial Worlds group.
For more info and the programme please visit research.rietveldsandberg.nl