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Wednesday, 26. February 2025
concept, February 26, 2025 at 9:25:56 PM CET PCAP MARCH 2025 MARCH 2025 Follow the program regularly on the blog: m1.antville.org Monday, 3 March 2025
At 10.00
MZS Diplome exam
Sisanmi Eureka Schuller Monday, 3 March 2025
At 16.00
WHERE: Studio ART and INTERVENTION/Concept (PCAP)
Atelierhaus, Lehargasse 8, 1060 Wien, 1OG Atelier Süd (M1) LECTURE Nina Cvar, Ljubljana
From Marx and Engels to Althusser and Jonathan Beller 1 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL
Opening Lecture Opening lecture by Guest professor Dr. Nina Cvar (Ljubljana, Slovenia) in the Studio Art and Intervention/Concept in the Summer Semester 2025. Organized by the Studio Art and Intervention, Concept (Post-conceptual Art Practices), Prof. Marina Grzinic. Supported by the International Office at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Marx and Engels’ seminal work, The German Ideology, through Althusser’s theoretical framework on ideology, emerged during the 1960s and 1970s. The segment will conclude with a reflection on the relationship between aesthetics and materiality, with a specific focus on cinema and the concept of the cinematic mode of production as articulated by Jonathan Beller. By examining cinema as a site where aesthetics, materiality, and ideology intersect, the discussion will aspire to rethink the relevance of ideological critique in aesthetics in the digital age. cv: Nina Cvar, is employed as a research associate at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana and as an assistant professor of sociology of culture at the Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana. Between 2008 and 2017 she was a professional film critic, contributing to all major Slovenian publications. In 2021, she published a scientific monograph Digital Image and Global Capitalism: Technology, Politics, Resistance for one of the central Slovenian humanities and social sciences publishers, Sophia. Tuesday, 4 March 2025
At 16.00
LECTURE NINA CVAR, ZOOM
2 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL CONTINUATION: Historization of Ideology: From Marx and Engels to Althusser and Jonathan Beller
This section will undertake a specific focus on cinema and the concept of the cinematic mode of production as articulated by Jonathan Beller. Join Zoom Meeting
akbild-ac-at.zoom.us
Meeting ID: 643 6779 3286 Monday, 10 March 2025 A research exchange program
SWEDEN AUSTRIA PHDS IN PHILOSOPHY OPEN TO ALL! In collaboration with the International Office of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Erasmus Plus Program, the Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG), and the Sigmund Freud Private University, Vienna, through its Interdisciplinary Research Center on Islam and Muslims in Europe (IFIME).
This initiative is further supported by the Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity, and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University, Sweden, AKH Wien/Medical University of Vienna, Salam Oida, and Afro Rainbow Austria (ARA). WHERE:
Schillerplatz 3, 1010 Vienna, SITZUNG SAAL 9:30 h: Welcome by Ingeborg Erhart (tbc), Angelina Kratschanova, and program presentation by Marina Gržinić 10 – 11:15 h Panel 1
(Moderation Henrie Dennis, PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna: Gendered Language Discourse in Border Policies: Examining the Role of Whiteness and its Impact on Global Migration) Ellen Rahm: Local Governance in Migration and Integration Policy in Sweden – Sites of Policy Innovation and Contestation? Ellen Rahm is a PhD candidate at the Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity, and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University, Sweden. With an academic background in public sociology and political science, she has professional experience in public policy research at both supranational and local levels of governance. Hossam Sultan: “Thinking about the Future, Stuck in the Past”: Imaginaries of the Future Home among the Palestinian Diaspora in Germany Hossam Sultan is a PhD candidate at the Department of Culture and Society (IKOS), Linköping University, Sweden. Trained as a social anthropologist, he holds an MA from Uppsala University and a BA from the American University in Cairo. His research focuses on transnational migration, space and place, and temporalities, particularly in relation to how the Palestinian diaspora in Germany imagines and navigates concepts of home and the future. Anahita Neghabat: Postmigrant Feminist Knowledge Production in Art and Activism in Austria and the DACH-Region Anahita Neghabat is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. She is a social anthropologist and artist; she engages with critical education, meme culture, feminist ontologies, and the study of (anti-Muslim) racism. She examines how postmigrant feminist movements in Austria and the broader German-speaking (DACH) region create and circulate knowledge through artistic and activist practices. Miguel González Cabezas: Multiplicities in Singularity: Ambivalence and Democracy in the Present Global Capitalist World Miguel González Cabezas is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. He is an artist and researcher whose work critically examines the intersections of the nation-state and neoliberal global capitalism. His research explores issues of life management, racism, migration, and social movements, focusing on the ambivalences that shape contemporary democratic structures within capitalist frameworks. Kenna Sim-Sarka (from Canada via Zoom): Contested Climate Futures: Indigenous Perspectives on Climate Responses in Sápmi and Secwépmc Kenna Sim-Sarka is a PhD candidate at the Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity, and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University, Sweden. Her research focuses on Indigenous perspectives on climate change and environmental governance, particularly examining responses to climate crises in Sápmi and Secwépmc. PAUSE 11:30 – 13 h: Panel 2
(Moderation Asma Aiad, PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna; Aesthetics of Participation: The Representation of Muslims in Austria through Art and Culture in the Context of Social Justice and Inclusion) Cathérine Franziska Lehnerer: Philosophical questions on participation in educational processes through comic production Cathérine Franziska Lehnerer is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Lehnerer is a Vienna-based teacher and artist who develops a workshop concept together with young people based on school practice in the sense of a critical-radical theory of education. Mansi Kashatria: Radical Nuisance? Contemporary Art Practices and Re-Imagined Globality Mansi Kashatria, a postgraduate scholar in Ethnic and Migration Studies from Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity, and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University, Sweden. She grew up and finished most of her education under the “colonial hangover” of socio-cultural interactions in India, describing therefore her relationship with contemporaneity and global art as having been rather disjointed and therefore critical. Elisa R. Linn (Elisa Linn Roguszczak): Self-Organization from Below to Strike the Border: The “Berlin Wall as a Condom” against the “Other” during the AIDS Pandemic in the GDR Elisa R. Linn (Elisa Linn Roguszczak) is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, writer, exhibition maker, and educator, currently teaching at Bard College Berlin. Aruanã Rosa: Contemporary Challenges of Combating Racism – Perspectives for Global Anti-Racism Aruanã Rosa, PhD candidate (University of Aveiro, Portugal) with European Consortium of Innovative Universities and Foundation for Science and Technology Portugal (ECIU-FCT) Fellowship. Member of Centre for Research in Higher Education Policies (CIPES-UA). Member of Migration and Human Rights Curatorship (UFPE-Brazil). Visiting PhD at REMESO-Linköping University. Alexandra Tatar (from Finland via Zoom): The Teleported Subject in Post-Socialist Romania Rethinking the Possibility of Eastern European Subjects at the Intersection of (Global) Media and Regional History: The Example of Handmade Satellite Dishes Alexandra Tatar is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. She is a researcher and visual artist who has been living and working in Vienna since 2011, focusing on grassroots movements in technology during socialism. LUNCH BREAK. INDIVIDUAL ARRANGEMENTS
14 – 15 h Panel 3 (Moderation Marina Gržinić) Nicolina Öberg: Housing policy, migrant settlement, and the restrictive migration regime Nicolina Öberg is a PhD candidate at the Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity, and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University, Sweden. Neda Hosseinyar: The Aesthetics of the Feminist Movements in Iran since 1979: Feminist Strategies for Social Justice –Navigating between the Lines of Theocracy and Patriarchy Neda Hosseinyar is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Hosseinyar is an Iranian-Austrian multidisciplinary artist, art mediator, and cultural worker. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in painting and an M.A. from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. From 2020 to 2023, Hosseinyar was the co-president of the Association of Women* Visual Artists of Austria (VBKÖ). Amin Mohseni: Forced Migration from Afghanistan: A Socio-Legal Analysis of the Status of Migrants in Iran (with a Focus on Hazara Refugees) Amin Mohseni holds an MA in private law and was teaching law courses at Afghanistan universities before the takeover of the Taliban. His major research interests include the rule of law, academic freedom, human rights, minority rights, migration, and asylum policies. He embarked on a role as a visiting researcher at Linköping University’s Department of Culture and Society, REMESO, under the Scholars at Risk (SAR) support program and has recently started his new affiliation with the department as a PhD candidate, researching the status of forced Afghan migrants in the neighboring countries and the immigration policies. Melike Isleyen: Imagining Imperfect Heavens Melike Isleyen is a PhD candidate at Oslo Metropolitan University, Department of Journalism and Media Studies, Oslo, Norway, with research interests in forced migration, settler colonial violence, visual cultures, decolonial feminist lens, border thinking, and decolonial future making. CONCLUSION FIRST PART PHD PRESENTATION. 16 – 18 h: City tour led by Asma Aiad, focusing on Vienna’s imperial and multicultural landmarks. Asma Aiad takes the group on a tour of the City Center, Aiad suggests a few spots like Marcus Omofuma Sculpture, Islamic Heritage in the city center with Ottomans, maybe a few other general sight-seeing, the main building of the academy, etc. to give insight into different districts in Vienna like 16th or 10th with migrants and workers. Start in front of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Schilerplatz. Tuesday, 11 March 2025
10 – 13 h: Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft, Nußdorfer Straße 68/5, 1090 Vienna The Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG) is an Austrian research institution that promotes innovative and interdisciplinary research approaches, particularly in the fields of health sciences. It is named after the physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1844–1906). Program proposed and organized by Adis Šerifović, PhD candidate at the Medical University of Vienna and Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft, Supervisor: Igor Grabovac Topic: Empowerment through Participation: Enhancing Health Literacy and Advocating for Inclusive Health Policies with Muslims in Austria PROGRAM: LECTURES Welcome from host organization:
Dr. Georg Russegger, Head of Open Innovation in Science Center (Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft) Goal at the LBG OIS Center is to open up spaces for experimental as well as inter- and transdisciplinary work in research and innovation fields. The involvement of civil society actors and the development and expansion of communities around the research contexts of the LBG OIS Center play an important role. Together with the Ludwig Boltzmann Institutes, it is important to design exchange and transfer services and to apply them in the European Research Area. Mag. Patricia Mussi-Mailer MA, Head of Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Fundamental and Human Rights: Talk about the human rights projects of the institute The Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Fundamental and Human Rights (LBI-GMR) is the largest extramural research institute in its field in Austria. It advances human rights research, fosters a human rights-based approach, and contributes to improving the human rights realities of individuals in Austria and abroad. Its interdisciplinary outlook and commitment to applied research and the third mission set it apart. The institute conducts basic and applied research which is current, international, inter-disciplinary, and translational. It intends to ensure the positive societal impact of its research; at the same time, its staff are committed to the highest standards of academic excellence. Professor Claudia Tazreiter, LiU (Linköping University) Sweden: Ghosts of the unjustly dead. Racial capitalism’s afterlife. Claudia Tazreiter is a professor at the Institute for research on migration, ethnicity and society (REMESO), Linköping University, Sweden. Her research focuses on the social and affective impacts of forced and irregular migration on human rights culture, the role of civil society in social change, and visual cultures of dissent. Claudia is Sweden’s representative on the European Advocacy Committee of the global network, Scholars at Risk, and is on the advisory board for the Academy in Exile. LUNCH AT LUDWIG BOLTZMANN GESELLSCHAFT (LUDWIG BOLTZMANN SOCIETY). 13 – 15 h:AKH Wien/Medical University of Vienna
Währinger Gürtel 18-20, 1090 Vienna LECTURES
Mag. Steph Grohmann, MSc PhD (Head of the Ethics Committee of Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft): Research ethics as anti-fascist praxis Steph Grohmann provides advice and consultation on research ethics at all stages of the research project life cycle, from “ethics by design” to the documentation required for impactful international publication. Her work at LBG focuses on ensuring that research participants and co-creators in participatory research are treated fairly, equitably, and with minimal risk of harm. Grohmann’s background is in medical anthropology and the anthropology of ethics. Assoc. Prof. Priv.-Doz. Dr. med. Dr. scient. med. Igor Grabovac (Professor at the Medical University of Vienna): Is Public Health failing? Role of social theory in promoting transdisciplinarity and participatory research Igor Grabovac is an Associate Professor and Specialist Physician in Public Health at the Medical University of Vienna. He leads the Community Health Lab, focusing on enhancing health equity and reducing care disparities, particularly in cancer prevention and care. Dr. Grabovac coordinates the Public Health curriculum for undergraduate medical students and is the principal investigator of projects like "CANCERLESS," addressing cancer prevention among homeless populations in Europe. There will also be a guided tour of the General Hospital of the City of Vienna, the largest hospital in Vienna, led by Prof. Grabovac. 15 – 18 h: FREE AFTERNOON Tuesday, 11 March 2025 18:30 – 23 h: Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
Lehárgasse 8, 1060 Vienna, 1 floor, Studio Art and Intervention/Concept (Post-conceptual Art Practices) COMMUNAL FOOD, TALKS, PERFORMANCE, PRESENTATION, concluding with DJ BAWO Food prepared by Afro Rainbow Austria (ARA) is offered to all joining us! Social food as artistic intervention supported by Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG). At 18:30 the food bar opens
At 18:45 the program begins with four events, concluding with DJ BAWO Moderators: Marina Gržinić and Anahita Neghabat • Marissa Lôbo and Roma Rio (from Brazil via ZOOM)
Marissa Lôbo is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Title PhD: Curating with Care: Politics of Affection, Nourishment, and Affinity. Marissa Lôbo presents her PhD research through a conversation with Roma Rio (Brazil) on reimagining and expanding curatorial practices through the lens of affection. Roma Rio resides in the territory surrounding the Tucunduba River in Belém-PA. Their work and research intertwine intimacy and collectivity, exploring family relationships, love, and friendship to weave together the sociocultural history of the region in which they operate. Marissa Lôbo is artist, curator, and cultural producer. She was part of maiz, a self-organized collective of/for migrants, and co-founded Kültüř Gemma!. Lôbo has also co-curated projects such as Night School at the Wiener Festwochen. • Nataša Mackuljak
Nataša Mackuljak is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Title PhD: On Historical Continuities between Anti-Fascist Women’s Action and Feminist Performance Art in the Former Yugoslavia. Nataša Mackuljak presents her PhD research through a lecture performance titled Antifascist Spirit, based on the article Antifascist Spirits: Mention and Remember. Nataša Mackuljak is performer, multimedia artist, social worker, curator, and cultural producer. She studied Sciences and Technology of Multimedia at the University of Social Sciences in Udine and worked in Italy as a radio and TV editor for weekly programs on Rai 3 (2005–2008). From 2016 to 2018, she co-curated and co-managed the Transcultural Festival for Art and Activism – Wienwoche, where she currently serves as executive director. • Henrie Dennis
presents Afro Rainbow Austria (ARA), the first organization in Austria founded by and for queer Africans. The organization is dedicated to advocating for and empowering LGBTQ+ individuals of African descent while fostering intersectional dialogue, community solidarity, and social justice. Mag.art. Henrie Dennis is Nigerian born human rights activist, art curator, and cultural mediator who continuously works on improving the lives of LGBTQ people of African descent. She is also the Founder Afro Rainbow Austria. Dennis wears multiple hats, contributing as a social worker at the street newspaper, Augustin while pursuing a PhD in Philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Her works centre on themes of queerness, migration, redistribution of resources, gender, anti-racism, and decolonization. • Asma Aiad
presents Salam Oida, a collective dedicated to promoting diversity in art and culture, particularly by supporting Muslims and persons of color in Austria. Founded by Asma Aiad and Ines Mahmoud, one of their key initiatives is the annual Muslim*Contemporary festival, which employs art as a form of resistance against systemic oppression and creates spaces for exchange and community building. Asma Aiad, BA MA is an artist, curator, and activist. Aiad is also co-founder of Salam Oida, an initiative that celebrates diversity in art and culture and is the initiator of the multidisciplinary festival Muslim*Contemporary. She explores Muslim identities in Austria and Europe as well as Muslim aesthetics in art and culture.
Music: DJ BAWO Wednesday, 12 March 2025
9 h – Visit the Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DÖW)
Center documenting the Austrian Resistance & victims of persecution, plus Nazi crimes & extremism. Altes Rathaus, Wipplingerstraße 6 - 8, A-1010 Wien 10:15 h – Metro to Sigmund Freud Private University (SFU) 11 – 14hSigmund Freud Private University (SFU) in Vienna
Interdisciplinary Research Center Islam and Muslims in Europe (IFIME)
Campus Prater, Freudplatz 3, 1010 Vienna, Room: E603 IFIME is dedicated to conducting differentiated and reflective research on the lived realities of Muslims in Austria and Europe. Its focus includes their social, economic, political, and educational participation, their engagement across various professional, academic, and personal spheres, as well as their self-perceptions and representations by others. The workshop at SFU is organized by Asma Aiad, with the participation of Professor Claudia Tazreiter, LiU (Linköping University) Sweden, will lead a discussion on the development of research careers in today’s world and what it is to be a researcher/advocate/activist in the EU impregnated with racism. Haqqi Bahram, LiU (Linköping University) Sweden: Statelessness as a Legacy and the Potential of Transitional Justice This talk explores my research on statelessness, focusing on the case of the Kurds in Syria. Statelessness is often overlooked in international transitional justice mechanisms, yet it is deeply tied to systemic injustices and human rights violations worldwide. In Syria’s current transitional phase, statelessness has become an urgent issue demanding justice amid political shifts, governance changes, and growing calls for democracy and accountability. Examining the experiences of both displaced Kurds and those who remain in Syria, this talk highlights statelessness as a persisting legacy affecting thousands of lives. I argue that it should be recognized as a critical element within Syria’s evolving transitional justice framework. Haqqi Bahram earned his PhD in Ethnic and Migration Studies in January 2025 at Linköping University, Sweden. His research focuses on statelessness, forced migration, and identity formation. His interests extend to the global governance of statelessness, politics of knowledge, refugee activism, and self-representation in international policy. He teaches courses on citizenship, borders, and conflict and has previously worked as a senior officer in humanitarian and development programs in Syria. Mezze provided.
14 h – Conclusion by Asma Aiad, Adis Šerifović, Claudia Tazreiter, and Marina Gržinić Monday, 17 March 2025
At 16.00 LECTURE NINA CVAR ZOOM
3 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL (ZOOM WILL BE TRANSMITTED ON TIME) TITLE: Ideology and Film: Theoretical Perspectives and the Cinematic Politics of Jordan Peele as a case study This section will offer students a comprehensive definition of ideology within the context of film studies, analyzing the ways in which films can reflect, reinforce, or challenge societal beliefs, values, and power structures. It will historicize the relationship between film and ideology through an exploration of key theoretical perspectives, including those of Deleuze, Mulvey, Foucault, Copjec, hooks, Hall, and Fanon and decolonial perspectives. The section will focus in particular on the films of Jordan Peele. Tuesday, 18 March 2025
At 16.00 LECTURE NINA CVAR ZOOM
4 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL (ZOOM WILL BE TRANSMITTED ON TIME) Continuation TITLE: Ideology and Film: Theoretical Perspectives and the Cinematic Politics of Jordan Peele as a case study This section will offer students a comprehensive definition of ideology within the context of film studies, analyzing the ways in which films can reflect, reinforce, or challenge societal beliefs, values, and power structures. It will historicize the relationship between film and ideology through an exploration of key theoretical perspectives, including those of Deleuze, Mulvey, Foucault, Copjec, hooks, Hall, and Fanon and decolonial perspectives. The section will focus in particular on the films of Jordan Peele. Monday, 24 March 2025
At 16 00 ZOOM Nina Cvar lecture
5 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL (ZOOM WILL BE TRANSMITTED ON TIME) TITLE: Mark Fisher and the Critique of Contemporary Capitalism: From Capitalist Realism, Technology to Neoliberal Subjectivity
This course provides a comprehensive examination of Mark Fisher’s theorization of contemporary capitalism. It critically engages with Fisher’s key concepts, including capitalist realism, hauntology, and his contributions to contemporary critical theory. Furthermore, the course serves as a foundation for rethinking neoliberalism, the social function of technology and the concept of neoliberal ideology, and the formation of neoliberal subjectivity. Building on Mark Fisher’s analysis of popular culture, the course will examine various examples from contemporary cultural production. Tuesday, 25 March 2025
At 16 00 ZOOM Nina Cvar lecture
6 lecture of 8 throughout MARCH and APRIL (ZOOM WILL BE TRANSMITTED ON TIME) CONTINUATION TITLE: Mark Fisher and the Critique of Contemporary Capitalism: From Capitalist Realism, Technology to Neoliberal Subjectivity This course provides a comprehensive examination of Mark Fisher’s theorization of contemporary capitalism. It critically engages with Fisher’s key concepts, including capitalist realism, hauntology, and his contributions to contemporary critical theory. Furthermore, the course serves as a foundation for rethinking neoliberalism, the social function of technology and the concept of neoliberal ideology, and the formation of neoliberal subjectivity. Building on Mark Fisher’s analysis of popular culture, the course will examine various examples from contemporary cultural production. Monday, 31 March 2025 At 16.00 until 18.00 WHERE: Studio ART and INTERVENTION/Concept
Atelierhaus, Lehargasse 8, 1060 Wien, 1OG Atelier Süd (M1) Guest professor Dr. Nomusa Makhubu, Cape Town, South Africa
Three events: a workshop and two lectures
31 March, 2025, April 1, 2025 and April 2, 2025 Workshop: Exploring Post-Apartheid Life, Art, and Culture
A workshop with Dr. Nomusa Makhubu, organized in collaboration with the Erasmus+ project and the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Initiated by the Studio Art and Intervention, Concept (Post-conceptual Art Practices), Prof. Marina Grzinic, IBK, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Dr. Nomusa Makhubu engages with critical perspectives and explores the intersections of art, history, and social change. This will also be an opportunity to gain an in-depth understanding of life, art, culture, and society in post-apartheid conditions, which will be discussed further. Makhubu is a Professor of Art History at the University of Cape Town (Michaelis School of Fine Art). She is the founder of Creative Knowledge Resources (CKR) – an open-access platform for socially responsive arts. to be continued April 1, 2025
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