Landscapes are formed and informed by solar radiation that becomes a different trajectory of light and lightness than usual visual culture or art history. A senergy that shapes planetary urban and non-urban surfaces it has become one central theme for attempts to manage climate change and temperature. Such scientific notions of measurement as the albedo effect - a ratio of light reflected back to space, or absorbed on to earth - comes to stand as part of extended architecture and media of planetary light.
Abelardo Gil-Fournier and Jussi Parikka
Abelardo Gil-Fournier is an artist and researcher. Originally trained in Physics, he holds a PhD in Art from Winchester School of Art (UK) and has worked as a researcher at FAMU in Prague. He is currently a grantee of a Leonardo scholarship from the BBVA Foundation. His work has been exhibited and discussed internationally, including venues such as Transmediale (Berlin), Fundación Cerezales Antonino y Cinia (León), Fotomuseum Winterthur (Switzerland), Design Museum (Shenzhen) and Tabakalera (Basque Country). He is the author, together with Jussi Parikka, of the book Living Surfaces. Images, Plants and Environments of Media (MIT Press 2024).
Finnish cultural historian Jussi Parikka is professor of Digital Aesthetics and Culture at Aarhus University and visiting research professor at University of Southampton (UK). He has written and co-edited a number of books on media theory, history of digital culture, and environmental media. Some earlier work includes What is Media Archaeology? (2012) and Insect Media (2010). More recent work includes The Lab Book (with Lori Emerson and Darren Wershler, 2022), Operational Images (2023), and Living Surfaces: Images, Plants and Environments of Media (with Abelardo Gil-Fournier, 2024). He also works as curator, including such past projects as Weather Engines (2022) and Climate Engines (2023-204) with Daphne Dragona.