Future Now Symposium 2023
23-24 March | Yorkshire Museum
Debate | Discuss | Connect
#FutureNow2023
The Future Now Symposium is an exploration of 21st century culture through the mechanism of art. This multi-disciplinary event brings together key institutions, galleries, publications and artists for discussion surrounding the most pressing issues from today’s creative industries. Through imaginative debates, panel discussions, career advice and cultural engagement, Future Now is a platform for idea generation. You will be able to hear from the UK’s leading curators, artists, gallerists and publications.
Topics include: the ethics of representation, mass digitisation, globalisation, diasporic identities and the continuing threats posed by the climate crisis. This two-day event brings together leaders from the creative industries to invigorate our minds and invite discussions around the most pressing topics from the sector. This year we are looking at Designing the Future: Advancing Technologies, Innovators of Post-Photography, and The Future of Curation. Featured speakers include: Ingrid Pollard, Yuri Suzuki and Hannah Starkey, alongside representatives from Open Eye Gallery, Barbican, Baltic, Arts Council England and many more. Future Now is a platform for idea generation and a key event in the UK art calendar. The 2023 edition asks: how do curators make decisions? How does an idea develop into a fully realised exhibition? How can you ensure artistic success? In a world where attention spans have been reduced to three seconds, how do you captivate audiences and ensure that public engagement is high?
We will also be celebrating the 20th Anniversary of Aesthetica Magazine and the founders, Cherie Federico and Dale Donley will be speaking about setting up an independent publication. Join us at one of the UK’s most engaged arts events this March.
Day One | Thursday 23 March 2023
Welcome Address
Cherie Federico
09:30-09:45 (Doors 09:00)
Cherie Federico, Founder, Director and Editor of Aesthetica, kicks off the 2022 Future Now Symposium with a Keynote Speech. Art has the power to transform and change the world. This has been a time of profound change. Over the last few years, we’ve had to quickly adapt to situations that were beyond our control. Through these turbulent times, we can and have taken comfort in artwork that helps us to make sense of the world. Art is a way to convene, and to collectively discover new modes of thinking. In this brief welcome address opening the event, Cherie Federico, Director of Aesthetica, offers an overview of the talks to come, and the importance of inspiration – an idea at the core of Future Now.
Image Credit15 Minutes with
Aesthetica Art Prize Finalists
09:45-10:00
The Aesthetica Art Prize celebrates contemporary art in all its forms, offering opportunities for exhibition at a major public gallery alongside publication in Aesthetica Magazine and the Aesthetica Art Prize Anthology. The award celebrates creativity in all its forms, across multiple disciplines, including: digital art and installation, painting and drawing, photography, performance and more. Previous exhibitions have posed larger questions about what it means to exist in a digitised, post-industrial landscape. Join us to hear from a selection of our shortlisted artists for this year’s Aesthetica Art Prize. Each artist will take to the stage to discuss their practice for five minutes.
In Conversation
Art, NFTs and the Metaverse
10:00-11:00
The metaverse continues to dominate technology headlines, from NFTs to virtual and immersive reality. These explosive developments provide new forms of interpretation and experience, calling into question the intersection between art and technology, as well as its potential future. But what, really, is the metaverse? How will immersive realities influence creative spheres? How can NFTs be used by artists? Chief Metaverse Officer Kadine James has pioneered new forms of digital content for two decades. She discusses how artists can use these tools to enhance their practice, in conversation with NFT certification platform Verisart’s Shelley Mannion, and chaired by Eric Fanghanel.
Designing The Future:
VR & Multi-Sensory Experiences
11:15-12:15
Artificial intelligence. Virtual reality. Augmented reality. Immersive experiences. As these technologies offer users new experiences, and our average screen time reaches upwards of seven hours per day, the lines between “digital” and “real” worlds become increasingly blurred. London-based immersive art collective Marshmallow Laser Feast cut through the noise. In conversation with award-winning artist and innovator Sadie Clayton, Co-founder Robin McNicholas discusses the complex relationship between art and emerging technologies, taking us behind-the-scenes of MLF’s mesmerising multi-sensory experiences. This session is a glimpse into the future: it looks at how we might use digital tools to spark conversations.
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The Future Of Curation:
Who Tells The Story?
13:30-14:30
How do curators make decisions? How does an idea develop into a fully realised exhibition? How can you ensure it is a success? In a world where attention spans have been reduced to three seconds, how do you captivate audiences and ensure that public engagement is high? What opportunities are there for emerging practitioners in an age defined by footfall and what is “Instagrammable”? Who and what is being exhibited, how and why? This session discusses the role of the curator in all its many forms and intricacies in the 21st century. The panellists are from some of the UK’s leading galleries, including Open Eye Gallery, The Art House, Peckham Platform and Barbican, and the discussion is chaired by University of York’s Helena Cox.
Larry Achiampong
Cross-Cultural and Digital Identities
14:45-15:45
Larry Achiampong is a BAFTA longlisted (2023) and Jarman Award (2021) nominated artist, filmmaker and musician. His projects employ archival material, film, live performance and still imagery to explore ideas surrounding cross-cultural and digital identity, class and gender. Achiampong will talk about how his body of work examines his communal and personal heritage, particularly the intersection between popular culture and the residues of colonialism. He will also discuss how dialogues around the themes of economic exclusion, belonging, displacement and cultural heritage come to light in film Wayfinder, shortlisted for this year’s edition of the Aesthetica Art Prize, which tracks a young girl’s intrepid journey across England.
Aziz + Cucher
Innovators Of Post-Photography
16:00-17:00
Anthony Aziz and Sammy Cucher have worked together as artistic duo Aziz + Cucher since 1992. Experimenting across a variety of media, including digital imaging, sculpture, animation, and video installation, their work is marked by a distinctive concern for technology’s impact on the body and society. Aziz + Cucher have been exhibited globally, notably at the 46th Venice Biennale with works held in museum collections including: the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Los Angeles Country Museum of Art and Reina Sofia, Madrid. They will discuss the representation of the body in the post-human digital age and portrayals of the natural world understood through new technology.
Ingrid Pollard
Who Shapes The Narrative?
17:15-18:15
Turner Prize-nominee Ingrid Pollard is a photographer, media artist and researcher. Pollard is a leading figure in contemporary British art. She has developed a social practice concerned with representation, history and landscape with reference to race, difference and the materiality of lens-based media. In the 1980s, Pollard produced a series of photographs of Black people in rural landscapes, entitled Pastoral Interludes. The works challenge how English culture places Black people in cities. Pollard will speak about her career – how she has broken new ground and forged pathways for younger generations, which has shaped Britain’s understanding of society and culture.
Aesthetica Art Prize Exhibition:
Private View & Awards, York Art Gallery (Y01 7EW)
18:15-20:15
Visitors have the chance to explore the 2023 Aesthetica Art Prize ahead of the crowds at this private view. You can join delegates, curators and guests from the art world, alongside the Aesthetica team, for a special evening of networking. After an informative day of talks and panel discussion, enjoy the Awards Ceremony – all from the heart of York Art Gallery. The exhibition features 20 shortlisted artists whose work invites you to explore, discover and engage with themes from our rapidly changing world, including: the ethics of representation, mass digitisation, globalisation, diasporic identities and the threats posed by the climate crisis. Please pre-register for this event.
Portfolio Reviews
Hosted by Industry Professionals
Daily
These 1-1 sessions, hosted at York Theatre Royal, are for practitioners working across all genres, including painting, photography, digital media, sculpture, video and more. Our industry experts provide essential guidance on how to develop ideas and further artists’ careers, as well as providing insights on funding opportunities and exhibition. Each session lasts 20 minutes. This is an opportunity to get key advice on any number of topics: how to accelerate your practice through digital platforms, how to approach curators and galleries, or simply to discuss a particular portion of your portfolio in real time. Booking essential. Click here to find out more.
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Day Two | Friday 24 March 2023
Meet Aesthetica’s Directors:
20 Years of the Magazine
09:30-10:00 (Doors 09:00)
Aesthetica Magazine is a bastion of independent publishing, ideas and thoughts, founded by Cherie Federico and Dale Donley in 2003. This March, the publication celebrates its 20th anniversary. It is a true achievement, and in this session, Cherie and Dale will speak about their journey setting up an arts organisation with international reach. They will talk about what it means to make your mark. They did not have funding, a business plan or distribution; they had an idea and a passion for culture. Hear how this became a leading publication for art and design with a reach of 500,000, as well as a platform for creativity across the Art Prize, Creative Writing Award and the BAFTA-Qualifying Film Festival.
15 Minutes with
Aesthetica Art Prize Finalists
10:00-10:15
The Aesthetica Art Prize celebrates contemporary art in all its forms, offering opportunities for exhibition at a major public gallery alongside publication in Aesthetica Magazine and the Aesthetica Art Prize Anthology. The award celebrates creativity in all its forms, across multiple disciplines, including: digital art and installation, painting and drawing, photography, performance and more. Previous exhibitions have posed larger questions about what it means to exist in a digitised, post-industrial landscape. Join us to hear from a selection of our shortlisted artists for this year’s Aesthetica Art Prize. Each artist will take to the stage to discuss their practice for five minutes.
Image CreditWhat Does It Mean To Be A
Painter In The 21st Century?
10:15-11:15
Painter, activist and entrepreneur Stuart Semple will speak about what it means to be a painter in contemporary society, exploring the impact the digital world has had on the medium. Beyond this, he will discuss his belief that art is for everyone. Semple is a multidisciplinary British artist working across painting, sculpture, technology and activism. He is well known for his sociologically engaged works that discuss youth politics, accessibility and democracy. Semple’s body of work orbits around a handful of recurring themes; anxiety, society, cultural history, technology, connection, community and freedom. There is a clear-minded sense of utility: art itself should have a social function.
A Guide to Funding
Your Practice
11:30-12:30
Being an artist needs to be thought of as running a business. It is important to think about how you will fund projects and develop partnerships in order to reach your goals. There are funding bodies out there who do support artists; however, competition is fierce. How will you make your applications stand out and what can you do to support your practice? How can you transform your career and continue to make work that is financially viable, environmentally sustainable and creatively innovative? This session includes a panel of experts from New Contemporaries, British Council, Arts Council England and Jerwood. Chaired by Kathryn Blacker, York Museums Trust.
Ori Gersht
Collisions Of Art History, Science And Technology
13:45-14:45
Can creatives draw inspiration from and re-imagine classical work? How can these images be brought into the digital world? How do you converse with the past? These are questions posed by London-based Israeli artist Ori Gersht, who is best known for destroying painstakingly recreated versions of classical paintings on camera. Fruit explodes and flowers shatter in slow-motion video, many of which reference classical paintings. His distorted replicas invite conversation around digitalisation, reality and virtual spaces. Gersht is interested in time periods involving revolutions – the scientific, industrial and digital – which he posits as the crossroads that define photography. A collision of history, science and tech.
Yuri Suzuki
Sound Design And Installation
15:00-16:00
Yuri Suzuki is interested in the potential of sound to inspire, shape and connect people on a global scale, using unique combinations of digital and analogue technologies to push the boundaries of art. Interactivity is key to his practice, from community-focused installations to accessible phone applications that give people the tools to create music. In 2018, Suzuki was named as a partner of leading independent design studio Pentagram and has since shown work at The Design Museum, London, Turner Contemporary and Triennale Milano. He joins us to talk about sound design, interactivity and connection, drawing on significant projects from his studio and work with Google and will-i-am.
What is the
Future Of Photography?
16:15-17:15
Photography has had a long and eventful history – moving from wet plates to smartphones, camera technology has changed dramatically over the years. What does the future hold for storytelling in this media? Four photographers with very different practices – Hannah Starkey, Tom Hunter, Maryam Wahid and Mónica Alcázar-Duarte – take us on a journey through the future direction of photography and lens-based media. How do we hold up a mirror to the present? Where do we go from here? These panellists discuss how practitioners continue to innovate with the democratisation of photography – where almost everyone has a camera in their pocket. Chaired by Jonathan May, Photoworks.
The Relationship Between Language and Self
17:30-18:30
The struggle between language and its limitations is central to Fiona Banner’s conceptual approach. She has an interest in how conflict is mythologised through popular culture. Her early work took the form of “wordscapes” or “still films,” blow-by-blow accounts in her own words of feature films, from war movies to pornography, as well as intimate scenes and historical events. These works evolved into solid single blocks of text, often the same shape and size as a cinema screen. Banner later turned her attention to the idea of the art-historical nude, observing a life model and transcribing, in words, the pose and form. Banner will speak about her extensive career and work. Chaired by University of York’s Helena Cox.
Drinks Reception
Yorkshire Museum, Y01 7FR
18:30-20:30
Celebrate with us as we mark 20 years of Aesthetica Magazine and the close of the Future Now Symposium 2023. This drinks reception, taking place in the Medieval Gallery at Yorkshire Museum, is a fantastic opportunity to unwind after a busy day of sessions, portfolio reviews and networking. Catch up with participants and delegates alike. Make new connections. Discuss key themes from the sessions you’ve attended. Immerse yourself in conversations about art. This casual social event is a great way to finish off the Symposium experience. It’s a destination for meeting attendees over a complimentary drink, which will be served on a first-come, first-served basis. All attendees are welcome.
Portfolio Reviews
Hosted by Industry Professionals
Daily
These 1-1 sessions, hosted at York Theatre Royal, are for practitioners working across all genres, including painting, photography, digital media, sculpture, video and more. Our industry experts provide essential guidance on how to develop ideas and further artists’ careers, as well as providing insights on funding opportunities and exhibition. Each session lasts 20 minutes. This is an opportunity to get key advice on any number of topics: how to accelerate your practice through digital platforms, how to approach curators and galleries, or simply to discuss a particular portion of your portfolio in real time. Booking essential. Click here to find out more.
Image Credit