- Ravi Agarwal
- Mohammad Al Attar
- Jamie Allen
- Paul Boshears
- Maria Chehonadskih
- Myung Ae Choi
- Orit Halpern
- Nina Jäger
- Valentina Karga
- Lital Khaikin
- John Kim
- Francine M.G. McCarthy
- Margarida Mendes
- Claire Pentecost
- Jahnavi Phalkey
- Patricia Reed
- Nishant Shah
- Adania Shibli
- Fernando Silva e Silva
- Rebecca Snedeker
- Nikiwe Solomon
- Koki Tanaka
- Simon Turner
- Mark Williams
Where is the Planetary? Day 3
Day 3 of Where is the Planetary? was dedicated to the search for coordinates, overlaps, convergences, and tensions that arise when myriad cosmologies converge around a common intent. In one reading and four rounds of conversation, participants started from their collaboratively developed models from the previous day, engaging in discussions focused on the importance of social principles for planetary practice and its potential to incorporate conditions of difference. They also touched upon the notion of collective responsibility, pulling from the participants’ Research Notes [PDF 14 MB].
Discussion
With Maria Chehonadskih, Francine McCarthy, Claire Pentecost
Moderated by Adania Shibli
One finds the planetary in manifold compositions – in different cohorts, from different perspectives and different scales, addressing different concerns. This is certainly both an asset and a liability for any type of planetary collaboration. On this last day of Where is the Planetary?, participants split into new groups to discuss their individual approaches to planetary concerns while reflecting on the collaborative exercises from the previous days. In four discussions, the participants produced new questions that incite different approaches to and new opportunities for collaboration.
Discussion
With Ravi Agarwal, Orit Halpern, Valentina Karga, Jahnavi Phalkey
Moderated by Nishant Shah
One finds the planetary in manifold compositions—in different cohorts, from different perspectives and different scales, addressing different concerns. This is certainly both an asset and a liability for any type of planetary collaboration. On this last day of Where is the Planetary?, participants split into new groups to discuss their individual approaches to planetary concerns while reflecting on the collaborative exercises from the previous days. In four discussions, the participants produced new questions that incite different approaches to and new opportunities for collaboration.
Discussion
With Myung-Ae Choi and Simon Turner
Moderated by Patricia Reed
One finds the planetary in manifold compositions—in different cohorts, from different perspectives and different scales, addressing different concerns. This is certainly both an asset and a liability for any type of planetary collaboration. On this last day of Where is the Planetary?, participants split into new groups to discuss their individual approaches to planetary concerns while reflecting on the collaborative exercises from the previous days. In four discussions, the participants produced new questions that incite different approaches to and new opportunities for collaboration.
Discussion
With Mohammad Al Attar, Margarida Mendes, Rebecca Snedeker, Nikiwe Solomon
Moderated by Mark Williams
One finds the planetary in manifold compositions – in different cohorts, from different perspectives and different scales, addressing different concerns. This is certainly both an asset and a liability for any type of planetary collaboration. On this last day of Where is the Planetary?, participants split into new groups to discuss their individual approaches to planetary concerns while reflecting on the collaborative exercises from the previous days. In four discussions, the participants produced new questions that incite different approaches to and new opportunities for collaboration.
Stories Review & Collaborative (post) scriptwriting Workshop
Moderated by continent. (Jamie Allen, Paul Boshears, Nina Jäger, Lital Khaikin, Anna-Luisa Lorenz)
With Ravi Agarwal, Myung-Ae Choi, Margarida Mendes, Claire Pentecost, Rebecca Snedeker, Nikiwe Solomon
In a process attempting to compose and collect a fragmented (post)script between Friday and Sunday, the experimental publishing collective continent. and friends describe a tentative, delayed and stuttered collaborative process of storytelling, narrative-making, retracing and recomposing. Through connected and disconnected fragments, soft scenarios and slow (post)script elements that emerged through the conversations, encounters and trajectories between the space, place and people of the Where is the Planetary? event, they asked how and if we can recount narratives about planetary existence. That is, how do we tell planetary stories?