CALL FOR RESEARCHERS
Virtual Grounds: Platforms
Co-presented with the Digital Justice Lab and Trinity Square Video
DEADLINE: September 17, 2021
We’re excited to announce the second year of Virtual Grounds program, a series dedicated to feminist perspectives on digital sustainability and survival. Virtual Grounds: Platforms is a 3-part training and research initiative that considers how we navigate the future, protect our virtual selves, and shape digital landscapes. Over the course of a year, we will survey how technology continues to grow and impact our lives in different ways through a series of workshops led by practicing creative technologists, scholars, and artists.
The call for applications will open August 25th, 2021 until September 17th. Successful applicants will be notified by September 20th. The program will begin October 2021 through to the end of 2022. This year, our program will be entirely remote. As such we welcome applications from anywhere in Canada.
When we began this initiative in 2019 we wanted to create a space for artists and researchers to explore their association with technology and how it shaped our urban and rural environments. Through a series of in-person and virtual workshops participants were able to expand their knowledge about the everyday intersections with technology. With the support of their mentors and staff, each participant was able to build a project that helped them answer a set of questions around their relationship to technology. The amazing projects can be found at https://www.showcase.virtualgrounds.zone/.
ABOUT THIS PROGRAM:
Virtual Grounds: Platforms is a 3-part online training and remote research initiative dedicated to navigating our experiences within virtual spaces and our relationship to surveillance and privacy. This program will support the study and dissemination of our understanding of digital rights within virtual spaces and how that intersects with the arts.
Training phase will include a 12-week co-created online curriculum, when the participants have access to technical capacity building opportunities and professional mentorship. During the research phase, participants will conduct focused research on the topic of their choosing, working towards a publication. The last phase will be the knowledge dissemination component which will support increasing broader digital literacy through the research interventions provided by participants.
This year we will be focusing on “Platforms”, what they mean to us, how they shape how we engage with each other, how they shape our lives, and how we move through virtual spaces. You will have an opportunity to work on a project that focuses on any aspect of technology platforms whether it be the social components or the infrastructure that maintains the tools we use. Our themes are used as guideposts on how you build your project and what questions you want to explore, it is adaptable to your own explorations and experiences. Over the course of this program we will be expanding our ideas of ‘platforms’ through workshops, readings and building together.
OBJECTIVES:
SELECTED RESEARCHERS RECEIVE:
PARTICIPANT’S PROFILE:
We are looking for 15 artists, researchers, writers, and creative technologists. We welcome applications from those who are interested in digital rights and justice, and are motivated to learn and share knowledge with a diverse group.
The criteria for applying are the following:
APPLICATION PROCESS:
Please fill out this form by September 17th 2021. If you have any questions don’t hesitate to ask, Emily Fitzpatrick: emily@trinitysquarevideo.ca
SELECTION PROCESS:
All applications will be reviewed by a selection committee. The selection committee is composed of representatives from Trinity Square Video and the Digital Justice Lab. You will be informed about the results of the selection within two weeks after the application deadline.
Virtual Grounds: Platforms is generously supported by the Canada Council of Arts.