Image CC 4.0 Hito Steyerl. Image courtesy of the Artist.
Image CC 4.0 Hito Steyerl. Image courtesy of the Artist.
1275 Minnesota St / Atrium + Media Gallery
Sun. Jun 26 2:00PM to 5:00PM
06/26/2016 2:00pm 06/26/2016 5:00pm How Not To Be Heard: Hito Steyerl's Subversive Strategies

In her 2013 work How Not to be Seen: A F**king Didactic Educational .MOV File, German-Japanese artist Hito Steyerl subverts the aesthetics of military firing ranges with music videos and contemporary dance to ask how we can elude visual regimes of ever-increasing surveillance.

Join us at Minnesota Street Project for a panel discussion with "How Not to Be Seen" Producer Kevan Jenson, MOCA Los Angeles curator Lanka Tattersall, and UC Berkeley's leading art and social practice author Shannon Jackson to explore the more subtle aspects of Hito Steyerl's work lurking behind the test targets. The panel will be moderated by Greg Niemeyer, Associate Professor of New Media, UC Berkeley.

Screening: 2pm in the Media Gallery

Panel Discussion: 3-5pm

This event is jointly organized by the Berkeley Center for New Media and Minnesota Street Project.

Please RSVP here.

1275 Minnesota St America/New_York public

How Not To Be Heard: Hito Steyerl's Subversive Strategies

In her 2013 work How Not to be Seen: A F**king Didactic Educational .MOV File, German-Japanese artist Hito Steyerl subverts the aesthetics of military firing ranges with music videos and contemporary dance to ask how we can elude visual regimes of ever-increasing surveillance.

Join us at Minnesota Street Project for a panel discussion with "How Not to Be Seen" Producer Kevan Jenson, MOCA Los Angeles curator Lanka Tattersall, and UC Berkeley's leading art and social practice author Shannon Jackson to explore the more subtle aspects of Hito Steyerl's work lurking behind the test targets. The panel will be moderated by Greg Niemeyer, Associate Professor of New Media, UC Berkeley.

Screening: 2pm in the Media Gallery

Panel Discussion: 3-5pm

This event is jointly organized by the Berkeley Center for New Media and Minnesota Street Project.

Please RSVP here.