⌘ Tech
DIY/DIWO Anti-surveillance Wearables
- When
- Friday, July 10 · 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
- Listed by
- STDISF — Arts/Culture
TIAT Art and Tech (Downtown: Powell and O'Farrell) Event Link Tired of the constant gaze of the digital panopticon tracking every move you make? Do you believe we should have the freedom not to be seen? In this workshop, you will learn how to use affordable and easily accessible materials to make yourself unintelligible to facial recognition systems and IR cameras. We will discuss specific strategies for exploiting vulnerabilities in these technologies and preserving your privacy, which you will apply in prototyping your own unique anti-surveillance wearable. To ensure your wearable is adversarially effective, we will use a facial recognition photo booth which will give you a “how-not-to-be-seen score.” The workshop will culminate in an anonymous group portrait. — Workshop facilitated by artists Angelina and Dann. Angelina Almukhametova (b. Kazan, Russia) is a US-based artist whose work investigates cybernetics and techno-culture through digital and analog technologies set in conversation with each other. Her works are indeterminate systems that manifest as performances, installations and sculptures which are site-responsive. Almukhametova has exhibited works and performed in Europe, US, and Iceland, and has presented her research in Switzerland, Greece, Malta, and the US. Dann Disciglio (b. 1993) is a transdisciplinary artist whose research examines how naturalism and humanism are reconfigured through the deliberate entangling of biological and computational systems. Working with trees, bees, bacteria, sensing devices, AI models, and lots and lots of gear, Disciglio constructs sculptural and spatial systems that grant audiences access to forms of perception, embodiment, and temporality that are otherwise humanly inaccessible. His installations and performances treat non-humans and technology not as metaphors but as parallel interlocutors—agents whose signals, behaviors, and material logics complicate anthropocentric assumptions and expand the ways humans encounter the world. Disciglio is Visiting Professor of Art & Technology at Lewis & Clark College, where he co-directs the Experimental Art Research (EAR) Forest, a permanent outdoor platform for ecological and technological inquiry. — This event is presented alongside our latest exhibition, The Epistemologies of Slop , an exhibition exploring how meaning, trust, and culture are produced under conditions of algorithmic excess and generative media. tiat is the intersection of art & technology! we are gallery for creative technologists to experiment, exhibit, and expand their practice. ⋆౨ৎ˚⟡˖ tiat is 501c3 nonprofit and donations are also tax-deductible, our EIN is: 39-3448606 . follow us on insta ! ―――――――――― SF Stuff To Do Do not edit this event! changes will be overwritten

