02 Mar 3/9/21 Jaret Vadera
In conversation (online) with:
Jaret Vadera
Tuesday | March 9, 2021 | 12PM – 1PM EST
On Slow Images and Multivalent Objects
In this talk, Jaret Vadera will discuss key arcs, propositions, and questions guiding his transdisciplinary practice. Vadera’s work explores how different technologies shape and control the ways that we see the world around and within us. He hacks, reconfigures, and reimagines images – that commonly serve as proof, document, or evidence – to reveal embedded ideologies hidden in plain sight, and to open up other spaces, and new narratives.
Jaret Vadera is a transdisciplinary artist whose work examines how images colonize the ways that we see the worlds around and within us. Vadera hacks different visual systems, and reconfigures them to open up parallel ways of seeing. His work is influenced by decolonial theory, science fiction, and the study of impossible objects. In parallel, Vadera has worked as a curator, organizer, and writer on projects that focus on art as a catalyst for cultural change. He is currently the Assistant Professor of Practice in New Media, in the Architecture, Art, and Planning School at Cornell University, and an Affiliate Assistant Professor in Studio Arts at Concordia University. Jaret Vadera lives and works between Canada, the US, and India; and is currently based in Brooklyn.
Our lecture series is made possible by generous support from the MacArthur Foundation, Ford Foundation, and MIT Transmedia Storytelling Initiative.