Hybrid event

CDCS Annual Lecture 2023

The fourth CDCS Annual Lecture How to See What’s Missing presented by Mary Flanagan.

13 December 2023
4pm - 6pm
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CDCS Annual Lecture 2023

13th December 2023 4:00 PM 6:00 PM GMT

Abstract

In “How to See What’s Missing”, artist and scholar Mary Flanagan discusses the investigation of artificial intelligence and machine learning and a groundbreaking use-case scenario of an image-making feminist AI. The project draws critical attention not only to the aesthetics of AI but the thorny biases behind technological learning systems and artworks, and calls into question whose art is accessible after all. The talk will highlight human cognitive biases as well, and speculate as to the equivalencies in the systems we build. A key aspect in interrogating AI, underrepresentation, and the arts lies within art archives, and Flanagan’s journey creating training data and discussing the work with scientists deeply informs the project. 

Speaker Biography

Mary Flanagan is a hyperdisciplinary researcher, designer and artist who uses games, algorithms, and play systems as tools for participation and discovery.  Her practice is speculative and engages with possibilities: political, sustainable, radical, and playful. She is the recipient of the American Council of Learned Societies Digital Innovation Fellowship, the Thoma Foundation 2018 Arts Writing Award in Digital Art, and commissions with the British Arts Council, the National Academy of Sciences, The Baltimore Museum of Art, and Rice University. Flanagan has lectured widely including at Oxford, Cornell, Columbia, Harvard, and the Sorbonne and has been a John Paul Getty Museum Scholar, a Senior Scholar in Residence at the Cornell Society for the Humanities, and Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Jackman Humanities Institute, University of Toronto. In 2016 she received an Honoris Causa in Design, Illinois Institute of Technology, and in 2019 named a Distinguished Scholar by the Digital Games Research Association. Her work has also been supported by the National Science Foundation, National Institute of Justice, National Endowment for the Humanities, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the British Arts Council, and the Tate. With six scholarly books, over fifty essays and chapters, arts books, and a collection of poetry to her credit, Flanagan is a thought leader sought for thinktanks such as the World Economic Forum at Davos and the Center for Future Design in Linz. She is the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of Digital Humanities at Dartmouth College and leads the design research laboratory Tiltfactor.org

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