CONVERSATION ACROSS COMMONS

kunci cultural studies center
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MADE IN COMMONS: IND ONESIAN ITERATION
CONVERSATION
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Conve rsation Across Com mon s
16th – 18th March 2015
at Jogja National Museum, 1st Floor
Jalan Amri Yahya No. 1
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
To attend the symposium it is necessary to book your
place. Seats are limited for 30 persons.
The symposium will be conducted in English and
Indonesian. Simultaneous translator device will be
provided with limited availability.
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Ms. Brigitta Isabella
brigitta.isabella@yahoo.com
+62 878 336 6917
Ms. Ratna Mufida
ratnamufida@gmail.com
+62 817 277 679
Conve rsat ion Across
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Conversation Across Commons is a three-days
symposium organized by KUNCI Cultural Studies
Center in conjunction with Made in Commons: Indonesian Iterations. This program considers commons
both as macro and micropolitical instances that
touch on perennial dialogues and existential debates:
on what does it mean to do things together, what can
we do with things we have in common and ultimately what relationships matter in the proper becoming
of, to tweak Nancy’s above quotation, “in commons”?
In Conversation Across Commons, artists, academics and activists alike are invited to critically
reflect upon notions of commons and commonings
as a double preoccupation in directly exercising
theory into action and teasing out insights from the
urgency of practices. We invite contributors from
different fields of disciplines, working with different
issues and based in different geographical locations
to prompt the three-day discussions. By doing so
our main interest is to yield a productive exchange
towards the valuation of commons as a shared-resource and collective site for leveraging commitment,
mobilizing solidarity and propelling sustainable
critiques against the evils of our time.
Ab o ut Made in Commons
Made in Commons (MIC) is series of experiments
on commons as categories in the making by ways of
doing things together and exploring what we have in
common. The first phase of MIC was held in Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam in 2013 where we
held an exhibition with artists from Indonesia and
the Netherlands alongside with a symposium “What
do we have in common(s)?”
The second phase of this project Made in Commons:
Indonesian Iterations involve experiments in conversation, reading group, research-action, residency,
and live-iterations with artists, art collectives,
researchers, and community members as an investigation on/through commons. The entire process
will be punctuated in the exhibition which runs from
13th–25th March 2015 at Jogja National Museum.
madeincommons.net
S che d ul e
D ay 1 , M o n d ay 1 6 t h M a r c h 2 0 1 5
10.00
12.00
13.30
- 12.00
Opening key Lecture by Kathryn Milun
Moderator: Antariksa
- 13.30
Lunch Break
- 15.30
Session 1: Rights to the city, Enclosure and Resources
Presentation by Elanto Wijoyono
Discussant: Elisa Sutanudjaja
Moderator: Yoshi Fajar Kresno Murti
15.30 -
16.00
7.00
-1
16.00
Coffee Break
Artist talk:
ketjilbergerak, PEL, ArtLab
Moderator: Brigitta Isabella
Day 2 , Tuesday 1 7 th March 2 01 5
2.00
-1
10.00
12.00
13.30
- 13.30
Lunch Break
- 15.30
Session 3: Social Cooperation in the Practice of Art
Presentation by Marina Vishmidt
Discussant: Brigitta Isabella
Moderator: Kristi Monfries
15.30 16.00
Session 2: Ownership, Authorship and Intellectual
Property
Presentation by Ignatius Hariyanto
Discussant: Amalinda Savirani
Moderator: Antariksa
16.00
- 17.00
Coffee Break
Artist Talk:
Setu Legi, Wok the Rock
Moderator: Leilani Hermiasih
Day 3, We dn esday, 1 8th March 2 01 5
09.30
1 1 .0 0
- 11.00
Session 4: Presentation by Syafiatudina, “Made in
Commons: Indonesian Iteration”
Moderator: Antariksa
- 1 1 .1 5
Coffee Break
1 3.1 5
1 1 .1 5 -
13.15 14.30
14.30
- 16.30
Closing lecture by Stefano Harney, “Logistical Capitalism”
Moderator: Brigitta Isabella
Lunch Break
Roundtable discussion: “What do we talk about when
we talk about Commons?“
Co-chairs: Brigitta Isabella and Antariksa
Ab o ut T HE S PE AKERs
iksa
antar
no
stefa y
e
n
r
ha
is a researcher and co-founder of KUNCI Cultural
Studies Center. He wrote a book titled Tuan Tanah
Kawin Muda: Seni Rupa–LEKRA 1950-1965 (Art
and the Institute of People’s Culture in Indonesia
1950-1965) (Yayasan Seni Cemeti, 2005). He is now
working on his new publication on art collectivism
in the Japanese-occupied Indonesia in 1940’s (to
be published by Kyushu University Press in April
2016).
teaches at Singapore Management University. He is
author with Fred Moten of The Undercommons; fugitive planning and black study (Autonomedia, 2013).
He is one of the artist directors, with the collective
freethought, of the Bergen Assembly Triennial in
Norway in 2016. He is founder with Tonika Sealy of
the art and education collective, Ground Provisions.
References from Stefano: Two interviews about “The
Undercommons”, co-written by Stefano Harney and
Fred Moten
http://classwaru.org/2012/11/12/studying-through-theundercommons-stefano-harney-fred-moten-interviewed-bystevphen-shukaitis/
http://chimurengachronic.co.za/the-alternative-is-at-hand/
ius
ignat o
t
n
a
hary
is a lecturer at Universitas Multimedia Nusantara
(UMN), Jakarta, Indonesia. He graduated from
Mass Communication Department, Faculty of Social
and Political Science, University of Indonesia and
pursued his master from Driyakara School of Philosophy. Since 1993-2004 he worked as a journalist
and editorial staff in various media, such as Forum
Keadilan magazine, D&R magazine and Tempo
magazine. His publications have ranging topics from
freedom of press, the pursuit of democracy and the
politics of media. His current research interest focuses on the politics of Intellectual Rights Property and
in 2014 he published a book Sesat Pikir Kekayaan
Intelektual (Misleading the IPR issue) (Kepustakaan
Populer Gramedia).
i
leilan
ih
s
ia
herm
is a researcher and musician based in Yogyakarta.
Her undergraduate (at Universitas Gadjah Mada)
and masters studies (at Queen’s University Belfast)
have been based on anthropology, focusing on topics
of authentication, tradition preservation, cultural
displacement, and ethnomusicology. In October
2014, she co-founded Laras, a study group exploring
issues of how music is experienced within society.
Aside from her studies in anthropology and ethnomusicology, she continues to write and perform
music for various artistic forms.
TA
BRIGIT
LL A
E
B
A
IS
graduated from the department of Philosophy at
Gadjah Mada University and continued her studies
in Critical Methodologies at King’s College, London.
She has worked in KUNCI Cultural Studies Center
since 2011. In 2014, she participated in 89plus x
Google Cultural Institute residency program in
Paris where she initiates a long-term collaborative
research, artistic, and immaterial platform (http://
frombandungtoberlin.com) that thinks through and
speculates on the 1955 Bandung Conference as a
nodal point for inciting new passages of histories.
For 2015–2016, she is one of the participating
scholars in “Ambitious Alignments: New Histories of
South East Asian Art”, a research program funded
through the Getty Foundation’s Connecting Art
Histories initiative.
YN
KATHR N
MILU
created and directs the Solar Commons project
(solarcommons.org), an innovative plan to place solar
energy collectors in urban right of way and hold the
contract for electricity sale, as a community trusts
that funds low-income housing. She is currently
Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Cultural
Studies at the University of Minnesota, Duluth
where she teaches a course on The New Commons.
She is also a Fellow at On the Commons, a national
organization devoted to reclaiming the commons
(onthecommons.org). In addition to articles, she
has written two books on the commons: the urban
commons in modern city planning (Pathologies of
Modern Space: Empty Space, Urban Anxiety and the
Recovery of the Public Self, Routledge 2006); and the
global commons in international law (The Political
Uncommons: A Cross-Cultural Study of the Global,
Ashgate 2010).
i
krist
s
ie
r
f
m on
FAJAR
YOSHI URTI
M
O
N
KRES
DA
AMALIN NI
A
IR
SAV
is an Australian/Indonesian curator and arts
producer based in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, with a
specific interest in innovative cross disciplinary
works that do not draw boundaries between art
forms and methods. In her capacity as a curator she
has worked with artists-run galleries and museums
in Europe, Australia and Indonesia. Her recent
work has focused on collaborative initiatives that
connect Australian and Indonesian artists, looking
at creative process driven projects with open-ended
outcomes as key.
graduated with a degree in architecture Atma Jaya
University in Yogyakarta, and has spent thirteen
years working and practicing within the villagecity spatial discourse. In the period of 2000-2008 he
worked with Pondok Rakyat Foundation (Yayasan
Pondok Rakyat). Since 2008, he has worked as
Research Coordinator and Program Developer at the
Indonesian Visual Art Archive (IVAA) in Yogyakarta, while continuing his “ugahari architecture” practice. Currently, along with a number of colleagues,
he is also managing the Yogyakarta Kampong Field
School and the Budaya Brosot School in Kulonprogo,
Yogyakarta. In 2012, Yoshi wrote the book titled The
Pating Tlecek Arsitektur, which conveys his critique
of concepts of space and architecture as based on his
experience of building the studio of noted Indonesian
artist Eko Nugroho.
is a lecturer at the Department of Politics and Government, University Gadjah Mada. She graduated
from Government Studies Gadjah Mada University
and International School for Humanities and Social
Sciences, University of Amsterdam. She completed
her PhD at University of Amsterdam where she
wrote dissertation on the political behavior of business actors on responding to political shift (reformasi) and neoliberal in Pekalongan, Central Java.
elisa
adja
j
d
u
sutan
tud
syafia
ina
a
marin
t
id
m
vish
is educated as an architect (University of New South
Wales) with specialization in sustainable & urban
development. She has been teaching in various universities since 2006, such as Department of Architecture, Universitas Pelita Harapan & Graduate School
of Planning, Universitas Tarumanagara. In 2009 she
co-founded Rujak Center for Urban Studies (rujak.
org) in Jakarta. She is now working on her project in
the revitalization of Kotatua Urban Heritage District
in Jakarta, while starting an open GLAM (Gallery,
Library, Archive and Museum) initiative among her
architect and art networks.
or for short Dina, has main interest on curatorial
work as interplay between theory and practice, including thinking and doing. In this interest and her
belief, artistic practice is part of knowledge inquiries, yet also can contribute to social and political
change. She is currently working as researcher and
curator at KUNCI Cultural Studies Center.
is a London-based writer occupied mainly with questions around art, labour and value. She is the author
of Speculation as a Mode of Production (Brill, early
2016) and A for Autonomy (with Kerstin Stakemeier)
(Textem, 2015). She also writes often with Anthony
Iles and with Melanie Gilligan. She works with
artists and contributes to journals such as Mute,
Afterall, Texte zur Kunst, and the South Atlantic
Quarterly, as well as co-/edited collections and catalogues. She is part of the faculty of the Dutch Art
Institute, a visiting lecturer at Middlesex University
and the University of Brighton, and has taught at
the University of the Arts in Berlin, Central Saint
Martins, and Goldsmiths.
References from Marina: Marina’s seminar outline
for the Dutch Art Institute (2015)
http://dutchartinstitute.eu/page/6055/marina-vishmidt---howto-do-things-with-theory--seminar---speculation-as-a-mode
O
ELANT
ON O
Y
O
IJ
W
has been involved in various projects in the area of
green city development and heritage protection. He
was coordinator of Green Map Indonesia (2006-2010)
and member of International Green Mapmakers
Advisory Council (2007-2010). He is currently working at Combine Research Institution, Yogyakarta
(combine.or.id), as coordinator of Sistem Informasi
Desa (Village Information System) program and also
active in a citizen movement in Yogyakarta named
Warga Berdaya (Empowered Citizen), aiming at
increased people’s participation in decision-making
towards their own city.
k unci cult ural studi es
ce nt e r
KUNCI Cultural Studies Center inhabits a
precarious position of belonging to neither this
nor that within existing disciplinary boundaries while aiming at expanding them. The
collective’s membership is open and voluntary,
and is so far based on an affinity to creative
experimentation and speculative inquiry with
focus on intersections between theory and practice. Since its founding in 1999 in Yogyakarta,
Indonesia, KUNCI has been deeply preoccupied
with critical knowledge production and sharing
through means of media publication, crossdisciplinary encounter, research-action, artistic
intervention and vernacular education within
and across community spaces.
ing
work m
tea
es
addr
s
Antariksa, Brigitta Isabella, Nuraini Juliastuti,
Syafiatudina, Ferdiansyah Thajib, Wok The
Rock, Hayyu Al Qoyyumi.
Jln. Ngadinegaran MJ 3/100
Yogyakarta 55141 Indonesia
editor@kunci.or.id
+62 274 745 6680
k u n c i .o r . i d