Sensorium: Centre For Digital
Arts and Technology
Sensorium
Based in the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) at York University, Sensorium is a research centre for creative inquiry and experimentation at the intersection of the media arts, performance, and digital culture. As a site for co-creation and shared critical reflection, Sensorium serves as a catalyst for examining how diverse media platforms enable multi-sensory perception and embodied experience, along with new modes of social engagement. Bridging disciplines and diverse communities, Sensorium researchers, artists, and scientists explore networked connections between people, sentient environments, and ecologies of place.
Research
Sensorium researchers engage in research-creation, curatorial and scholarly projects both individually and in interdisciplinary research teams. Sensorium’s research clusters provide multiple entry points for new members and serve as a nexus for connecting researchers and encouraging organic project development. The research clusters include:
Research-creation in this cluster explores the spectrum of performance, from public experiences to galleries and proscenium stages, with integrated focus on the intersection of the human body and adaptive media systems. Work in this cluster traverses theories of multi-sensory experience, applications of sensing technologies, open-ended participatory artificial life environments and the intersection of machine agents and the performing arts.
Research-creation in this cluster engages the creation of interactive installations and immersive environments, networked objects and wearables, digital fabrication, and data visualization. Mobilizing emerging technologies in urban environments, the city turned interface is explored through large-scale projection and interactive media facades, mobile and locative media.
Research-creation in this cluster involves the creation of new stories for new screens, researchers who are developing integrated, performance based, and networked media projects. Working with everything from interactive documentaries, AR and VR, large-format media and pervasive games alongside site-specific interventions, this research cluster seeks to develop digital technologies that are expanding the affective and cinematic geographies of contemporary media cultures.
Research-creation in this cluster explores how digital and communication based media can be creatively used foster social and political change. Some examples of research undertaken in this cluster include, agit-prop and cyber-activism, VR in human-rights work, and building of community connection and dissent through social media.
Research in Sensorium’s clusters is supported by a consortium of labs across AMPD:
The Alice Lab for Computational Worldmaking develops transferable knowledge and creative coding technology as well as intensifying computationally literate art practice in the construction of responsive artificial worlds experienced through rapidly emerging mixed/hybrid reality technologies including both Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR). Inspired by the creativity of nature, its research-creation program leverages strong simulation and the self-modifying capacity of computational media to create artificial worlds whose rules can be rewritten while participants interact within them, pioneering heightened levels of human-machine interaction and intensified aesthetic experience through meaningful engagement using the whole body. Cutting across work in generative art, computer graphics, human-computer interaction, artificial life, complex systems and compiler technology, this research program reinforces influential work at York in augmented reality, computer vision, stereoscopic cinema and ubiquitous screens, and results in transferable research, open-source tools, and novel creative works.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Graham Wakefield, Canada Research Chair; Assistant Professor, Computational Arts/Visual Art & Art History
The Augmented Reality (AR) Lab is dedicated to producing innovative expressive tools, research methods, interfaces and content that challenge cinematic and literary conventions and aim to enhance how people interact with their physical environment and with each other. Part of the Future Cinema Lab in the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, the AR Lab offers researchers the opportunity to explore new screen technologies, approaches and techniques through both production and theoretical study of this emerging medium. The lab offers some of the most advanced technology available to practitioners in a fine arts context anywhere in the world.
Researchers in the AR Lab have produced international award-winning immersive AR pieces, interactive theatre, AR fiction and poetry for iPads and iPhones as well as AR installations and mobile media. Students in the lab are undertaking research at the cutting edge of art/science collaborations and are often involved in international partnerships. Graduate trainees have presented work at the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences, published documentation of prototypes in arts and culture journals, participated in SIGGRAPH, ISEA, DAC, ISMAR, TEDx Dubai, ELO, MLA, HASTAC and SCMS, delivered keynote addresses internationally, and launched software and publishing ventures.
The AR Lab is part of the Ontario Augmented Reality Network and has collaborated with Georgia Tech, the Ontario Science Centre, TIFF/Nexus and Millenium3 Engineering, among others. The AR Lab is also engaged in public outreach initiatives and frequently delivers hands-on workshops. Workshop participants to date include women in the gaming industry, Women in Film and Television, the Ontario Augmented Reality Association, historians, schoolchildren and museum goers.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Caitlin Fisher, Associate Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
BetaSpace – named after the media industry’s term “beta release” for a project that is ready for public testing – is Media Art’s co-working lab space that can facilitate interdepartmental initiatives with cutting-edge digital equipment and resources. It is found in the basement level of the Joan & Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts and is comprised of a large studio lab and equipment closet, partitioned for physically-distanced work/play spaces (CFA024), a classroom/studio space (CFA026), the office of the Media Arts Technical Coordinator (CFA030), and a high-tech editing lounge, currently in development (077). All equipment for Media Arts will be signed out at BetaSpace.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Taien Ng-Chan, Assistant Professor, Cinema Media Arts
The Digital Sculpture Lab (DSL) is a one-of-a-kind facility dedicated to the study and utilization of emerging 3D printing technology, investigating the collapsing borders between the digital universe and the reality of physical objects.
Established in 2005 with support from Canadian Foundation for Innovation and the Ontario Ministry of Innovation, the DSL allows for the translation of digitally designed objects into actuality, which not only represents a new process of creating but demands a complete rethinking of the way we perceive and relate to physical objects. The three main research objectives of the DSL are to:
- utilize this technology in the enhancement of already existing sculptural processes
- explore the possibilities for new conceptual and physical practices that this technology makes possible for the production of cultural objects and the manufacturing sector
- adapt and evolve this technology in a critical environment in order to advance the technology of 3D printing
The DSL is structured around a central design station, comprising several computers used to design objects in virtual reality, that serves as the hub of the laboratory. Augmenting this hub are physical work stations where the coded information is translated into three-dimensional objects in a variety of materials and composites. The systems utilized range from CNC milling machines and plasma cutters to advanced rapid prototyping machines, as well as a 3D scanning station allowing for physical objects to be translated into the virtual realm.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Brandon Vickerd, Associate Professor, Visual Art & Art History
Founded in 2015 by Doug Van Nort, DisPerSion Lab, located at York University, is dedicated to research-creation projects which examine questions surrounding instrumental and gestural expression, embodied perception, time consciousness and performative agency in the context of envisioning new forms of interdisciplinary creative practice. The lab space is defined by an environment suffused with reactive, intelligent digital media within which to explore new forms of artistic expression, and new insights into how we sense, process and interact with the performing arts in the post/digital age. The lab culture is defined by improvised inquiry and exploration of distributed creativity through music and movement-based performance practices that are mediated by contexts such as the physical distribution of performers across internet-based networks, and distribution of creative decisions between human performers and “artificially creative” computational agents.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Doug Van Nort, Canada Research Chair; Associate Professor, Computational Arts/Music/Theatre
The Future Cinema Lab (FCL) is an innovative transmedia research umbrella bringing together York Fine Arts faculty, students, alumni and scholars whose diverse projects investigate how new digital storytelling techniques are critically transforming, and being transformed by, new screen technologies. The first dedicated facility of its kind in Canada, the FCL enables researchers to design new forms of storytelling, develop prototypes for urban research, and create innovative, subversive new media projects within networked and hybrid media environments. Since 2007, FCL members have used lab resources and facilities to produce new media installations, present outdoor screenings in public spaces, curate interactive exhibitions, and initiate pioneering artists projects involving locative media, GPS, cellphone apps, augmented reality and urban transit commuter screens.
The FCL was initiated as a joint research project between Professors John Greyson, Caitlin Fisher and Janine Marchessault, bringing together their unique and complementary practices as researchers, artists, filmmakers and curators within a spectrum of new media practices. In 2009 Professors Mark-David Hosale, Ali Kazimi, Brenda Longfellow and Don Sinclair joined the lab as collaborators, expanding the FCL’s areas of concern to include interactive web documentary, hybrid new media projects and 3-D installation.
The FCL approaches the emerging and established fields of site-specific art, transmedia and digital activism with hybrid perspectives, emphasizing issues of diversity, social justice and digital citizenship. In the face of an overwhelmingly powerful entertainment industry that monopolizes the world’s screens and future cinemas, researchers involved in FCL recognize the urgency to create new kinds of shared experiences that exist outside the lab or the profit-driven marketplace, engaging with some of the most pressing social and ecological issues facing our planet today.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHERS:
Janine Marchessault, Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
Caitlin Fisher, Associate Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
John Greyson, Associate Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
Mark-David Hosale, Associate Professor, Computational Arts
Ali Kazimi, Associate Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
Brenda Longfellow, Associate Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
Don Sinclair, Chair, Computational Arts
The Mobile Media Lab (MML) is co-located at York University in Toronto and Concordia University in Montreal. It comprises an interdisciplinary research team exploring wireless communications, mobile technologies and locative media practices. MML brings together a unique configuration of expertise in art, design, engineering, new media, cultural theory, social science and policy studies. Projects projects treat physical territory as an active and volatile interface using networked technologies to connect the physical to the virtual.
Current research encompasses:
- collaborative gaming and performance in mobile contexts
- playful and alternative interaction scenarios for mobile and portable computing
- exploration of novel physical interfaces
- integration of the physical and virtual studio utilizing 3D modeling and rapid prototyping technologies
- experimentation with new processes and materials development.
MML researchers have produced projects exploring the cultural and aesthetic dimensions of media-rich content for mobile platforms using an assemblage of cell phones, PDAs, GPS systems, custom-built Bluetooth sensors, and open source software. Their research probes how these subtle technologies augment, enhance, deplete, mediate and foster new sensations of temporality in urban contexts and outdoor spaces.
Interdisciplinary collaboration is an integral part of MML research. Past and current collaborations include universities, research institutes and industry partners including Concordia University, the Mobile Experience Lab at OCAD U, the Canadian Film Centre Media Lab, Hexagram: Institute for Research/Creation in Media Arts and Technologies, and Apple Canada.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Michael Longford, Director, Sensorium; Associate Professor, Computational Arts
The n-D::StudioLab is a facility designed for the research and development of transmodal artworks based on a worldmaking agenda.
The “n” in n-D refers to vast potential and the infinite. The “D” refers to:
- n-Disciplinary – trans-disciplinary, blurring boundaries, cross breeding and evolving fields
- n-Dimensional – expanding, complex and continuous
- n-Domain – trans-sensory, trans-experiential, transmodal
The n-D::StudioLab is an adaptable space that can accommodate unexpected projects and unknown future technologies with as few limitations as possible. Research-creation activities in the n-D::StudioLab revolve around the activities of theoretical discourse, methodological development and the production of works. The common foci of these activities explore questions and produce work in the areas of art/science, media art and Interactive architecture. While a distinction between theory, methods and making can be helpful for discussion, in practice they are interrelated with the output of one activity being the catalyst of another. Since its inception in fall 2011 the n-D::StudioLab has been involved in the research and development of several works that have been shown internationally.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Mark-David Hosale, Associate Professor, Computational Arts
The Peripheral Visions Lab is an assemblage of research activities that decentre vision, emphasizing the peripheral perspectives of queer, feminist, critical disability, and decolonial critique. The lab cultivates different ways of seeing, sensing, feeling, and understanding, locating sensory experience in bodies that are situated historically and materially in fields of power. The lab recently partnered with Sensorium and VISTA to launch the Peripheral Visions Speakers series, which features speakers who problematize normative vision, explore the multi-sensory networks of blind epistemology, theorize Indigenous visioning practices, and investigate the creative innovation of crip technoscience.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Mary Bunch, Assistant Professor, Cinema & Media Arts
Social and Technological Systems (SaTS) lab tackles social challenges using Human Centred Design, Systems Design and Speculative design approaches. Current research projects focus on addressing UN Sustainable Development Goals pertaining to health and wellbeing, ageing, global health and education challenges.
The SaTS lab is part of School of Arts Media Performance and Design (AMPD).
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Shital Desai, Assistant Professor, Design
The SLOlab is an interdisciplinary research-creation laboratory that supports the creation of artworks, creative probes, and critical technological investigations that draw attention to complexity and the interconnections found in and around (non) human engagement within the world. Through the mattering of (complex) systems, research in the lab investigates the sympoietic and slippery relationships that weave together and form living ecologies. Creative projects seek out the hidden dependencies within systems, and pluck at the cultural, ecological, political, and philosophical threads that contribute to and make up the fabric of the world that we participate in. Creators in the lab combine traditional and non-tradition art materials with a diverse range of technological tools, including physical computing, IoT, 3D imaging, LIDAR, digital fabrication, machine learning/AI and creative coding to situate participants within embodied and participatory experiences. Research goals for the lab are diverse and range from formal outcomes such as research papers and curatorial, artistic and archival projects, to community focused outreach designed to invigorate conversation through performance, workshops and other events. The SLOlab is an inclusive and open space that fosters dialogue and discovery with the goal of finding new working methodologies and ways of thinking and moving with and through the world.
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER: Jane Tingley, Associate Professor, Computational Arts
Archive/Counter-Archive is a project dedicated to activating and remediating audiovisual archives created by women, Indigenous Peoples, the LGBT2Q+ community, and immigrant communities. Political, resistant, and community-based, counter-archives disrupt conventional narratives and enrich our histories.
Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA) is a collaborative program funded by the Canada First Research Excellence Fund(CFREF, 2016-2023) that builds on York’s world-leading interdisciplinary expertise in biological and computer vision. In collaboration with over 50 academic, public, and for-profit partners from around the world, VISTA will propel Canada as a global leader in the vision sciences by integrating visual neuroscience with computer vision to drive innovation.
Connected Minds: Connected Minds is a research initiative funded by the Canada First Research Excellence Fund that explores the interplay between humans and intelligent technologies, with an emphasis on understanding emergent societal effects and predicting technological disruptions. By leveraging these insights, the program aims to drive innovative research and technology development that aligns with its long-term goals of fostering a resilient techno-social collective.
Hemispheric Encounters: Hemispheric Encounters: Developing Transborder Research-Creation Practices brings together scholars, artists, activists, and community organizations from across the Americas to explore hemispheric performance as a methodology, a pedagogical strategy, and tool for social change.
ICECUBE LED Display [ILDm^3]
ICECUBE LED Display [ILDm^3] is a cubic-meter (1/1000th scale) model of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. This novel telescope looks for nearly invisible cosmic messengers, neutrinos, using a cubic-kilometer of instrumented ice starting 1450 meters below the surface at the South Pole. Created by Mark-David Hosale, James Madsen, and Rob Allison. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.mdhosale.com/icecubedisplay
Disrupting Solitude
Disrupting Solitude ponders the agency of the human in an increasingly digitally mediatized existence and invites participants to artistically explore the dynamic relationship, tension and potential that exists between people, between people as mediated through technology and the invasive seduction by technology in contemporary life. Created by Gwenyth Dobie and William Mackwood.
Rallentando
Rallentando is a multimedia art installation that creates a virtual forest, enabling hyper-living participants to experience a vital restoration of body and memory. Created by Gwenyth Dobie and William Mackwood.
Aeolian Traces
Aeolian Traces is an immersive installation that utilizes a hybridization of data harvesting, physical installation, algorithmic composition and spatial sound. Presented through a combination of a multi-channel sound diffusion system and an 8-channel ventilator (DC motor fan) setup, the piece creates wind currents in a gallery space triggered by human migration data. Created by Joel Ong. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.arkfrequencies.com/aeoliantraces/
Nanovibrancy
Nanovibrancy (2011) was undertaken at SymbioticA, the Centre of Excellence in Biological Arts at the University of Western Australia. It features a mix of wet biological science, empirical physical data processing and the aesthetics of a site-specific sound installation. Created by Joel Ong. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.arkfrequencies.com/nanovibrancy/
ORIGIN8
ORIGIN8 is a collaboration between AMPD (Don Sinclair and Doug Van Nort) and Canada’s National Ballet School. Using customized machine-learning software integrating a custom-made sound-performance interface and 3D graphics generator created by the AMPD artist-researchers, data captured from the dancers’ movements generated dramatic, kinetic image projections and an ever-changing musical soundscape. To learn more about this project visit: https://dvntsea.com/projects/origin8/
Burnish
Burnish is an interactive performance installation that premiered at the 56th Venice Biennale 2015 with 9dragonheads in the official collatoral event Jump Into the Unknown; and at Toronto’s Theatre Center in May 2015. It was remounted for SummerWorks 2016 at Toronto’s Theatre Centre with a new concept for the tent, technology and audience participation. Created by Erika Batdorf and Mark-David Hosale. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.mdhosale.com/burnish/
homunculus agora (h.a)
homunculus agora (h.a) is a large-scale architectonic installation of several dozen sculptural bodies (homunculi) that are organized in a fluid-like cluster. Created by Mark-David Hosale. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.mdhosale.com/homunculus
vox:lumen
Thanks to a multi-year creative partnership with ground-breaking researchers at York University and interactive designers Aesthetec Studio, Zata Omm Dance Projects is undertaking a formal experiment of the most absolute practicality: What does a show that is powered by sustainability look like? Lighting itself with energy created by the dancers, the audience and renewable sources, vox:lumen imagines a situation in which the necessity of illumination structures every human interaction. The performance confronts the audience with the most elemental metaphor for understanding, as dance becomes the interplay of darkness and light – the light we make ourselves. Choreographer: William Yong. Set designer and Technology Consultant: Ian Garret. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.ianpgarrett.com/portfolio/vox-lumen/
Transmission
Transmission is an immersive theatre production that tells the story of two brilliant sisters selected to join a mission to meet our celestial neighbors. Their story is told through a live show at the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, a podcast, and several site-specific, augmented reality scenes that are linked to specific locations throughout Edinburgh. Created by Ian Garrett. To learn more about this project visit: https://toasterlab.com/projects/transmission/
Sputnik Returned
Sputnik Returned is a stainless steel sculpture which consists of a replica of the first manmade satellite to orbit the earth, Sputnik, installed as if it has fallen from its orbit and crashed back to earth. It is installed as part of Sculpture by the Sea 2013, in Arrhus, Denmark. Created by Brandon Vickerd. To learn more about this project visit: http://brandonvickerd.com/sputnik-returned/
Consistent Partial Attention
CPA [Consistent Partial Attention] offers a paradoxical meditation on what it means to be present in our contemporary screen-obsessed world. Developed through digital collage the CPA [Consistent Partial Attention] performance is guided by a video score of pre-existing / found Internet footage of individuals improvising in their homes. Comprised of performers/dancers Freya Björg Olafson, James Phillips, and Lise McMillan. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.freyaolafson.com/cpa-consistent-partial-attention
XL-Outer Worlds
XL-Outer Worlds will result in a four-day Festival Celebration in 2019 at the Cinesphere, the world’s first permanent IMAX movie theatre located in Toronto at Ontario Place. This festival will showcase the commissioned films celebrating the invention of IMAX, alongside curated programs of early IMAX films. The XL-Outer Worlds festival will later tour the first IMAX cinemas across Canada in Victoria, Sudbury, Edmonton and Montreal. Curated by Janine Marchessault and Christian Kroitor. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.xlouterworlds.ca
Artificial Nature: Conversation of Shadows
Artificial Nature: Conversation of Shadows is a site specific work for a gallery in the Seoul Innovation Center that was previously occupied by the Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention for medicinal storage and animal experimentation. Created by Graham Wakefield and Haru Ji, with special thanks to Mark-David Hosale. To learn more about this project visit: https://artificialnature.net
Endless Current
Endless Current is a visualization of a complex biologically-inspired system. Through immersive display it presents an infinitely explorable world sustaining a virtual ecosystem of multiple species. Created by Graham Wakefield and Haru Ji. To learn more about this project visit: https://artificialnature.net
Becoming Sensor
Becoming Sensor is a multisensory research-creation project that aims to decolonize the ecological sensorium. Created by Natasha Myers.
To learn more about this project visit: https://becomingsensor.com
Tentacles: Parallel Play & Ambient Performance
Tentacles, a smartphone-controlled, multi-user ambient gaming experience projected into public spaces. Created by Michael Longford, Rob King, and Geoffrey Shea. To learn more about this project visit: http://tentacles.ca/index.html
Quasar 3 [Danger du Zero]
Quasar 3 [Danger du Zero] is an immersive, interactive light and sound installation. Created by Mark-David Hosale and Jean-Michel Crettaz. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.mdhosale.com/the-quasar-series/
Offshore
Offshore is an interactive web documentary-in-process, about the real-world consequences of ‘extreme oil’ exploration. Created by Brenda Longfellow, Glen Richards, and Helios Design Labs. To learn more about this project visit: https://offshore-interactive.com
Dead Astronaut
Dead Astronaut is a figurative sculpture subverting dominant cultural narratives. Created by Brandon Vickerd. To learn more about this project visit: http://brandonvickerd.com/index/#/dead-astronaut/
WinWin
WinWin is an electronic interactive sculpture modelling social exchanges between the art object and the viewer. Created by Nell Tenhaaf. To learn more about this project visit: https://vimeo.com/48433147
Comrade Valentina
Comrade Valentina is a video projection encapsulating the 1963 space flight of female cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova. Created by Nina Levitt. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.ninalevitt.com/portfolio/comrade-valentina/
Urban Trail Portraits
Urban Trail Portraits collapses space and time via custom-coded video manipulation to produce photo works portraying dynamic relationships between trail and cyclist. Created by Don Sinclair. To learn more about this project visit: https://www.yorku.ca/dws/utp/
Murder in Passing
Murder in Passing is a trans-media, multi-platform serial ‘whodunit’ murder mystery that combines clues from silent videos, blogs, tweets and fugues. Created by John Greyson. To learn more about this project visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_in_Passing
Gala Hernández López is an artist, filmmaker, and researcher whose interdisciplinary practice combines film, video installations, performance, and publications. Her work critically examines computational capitalism’s impact on subjectivity, exploring virtual imaginaries, tech utopias, and human fantasies of control from an ecofeminist perspective. Her award-winning creations, including the César-winning La Mécanique des fluides (2024), have been showcased at major festivals and institutions worldwide. A PhD candidate at Paris 8, she also teaches and directs After Social Networks. She is currently in residence at Palais de Tokyo in Paris. She is working on Dreams of Prophets, a film about the history of dream engineering technologies.
Ar Ducao (they/them pronouns) is an artist, engineer, educator, and organizer who works with underrepresented and incarcerated learners. They cofounded Multimer, a patent-holding bio-spatial analytics firm awarded by the National Science Foundation SBIR (small business innovation research) program. They are also executive producer and lead creator of The Great Tit is a Bird, a sci-fi arthouse animation series and audio drama. Ducao is a part-time professor at NYU School of Engineering, NYU Prison Program, and MIT MITES. They advise the Black women’s empowerment groups Inua Kike and Birth by Us, the Callen Lorde LGBTQ+ Health Center, and the National Eczema Association.
Stephanie Rothenberg
Stephanie Rothenberg’s interdisciplinary art draws from digital culture, science and economics to explore relationships between human designed systems and biological ecosystems. Moving between real and virtual spaces her work investigates the power dynamics of techno utopias, global economics and outsourced labor. She has exhibited throughout the US and internationally in venues including Eyebeam (US), Sundance Film Festival (US), Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art / MASS MoCA (US), House of Electronic Arts / HeK (CH), LABoral (ES), Transmediale (DE), and ZKM Center for Art & Media (DE). She is a recipient of numerous awards, most recently from the Harpo Foundation and Creative Capital. Residencies include ZK/U Zentrum für Kunst und Urbanistik in Berlin, TOKAS / Tokyo Art and Space, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace, Eyebeam Art and Technology and the Santa Fe Art Institute. Her work is in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art and has been widely reviewed including Artforum, Artnet, The Brooklyn Rail and Hyperallergic. She is an ongoing participant and organizer in the MoneyLab research project at the Institute of Network Cultures and co-organizer of the 2018 MoneyLab 5 symposium that took place in Buffalo, NY. She is Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Art at SUNY Buffalo where she co-directs the Platform Social Design Lab, an interdisciplinary design studio collaborating with local social justice organizations.
Connected Minds Artist-in-Residence 2024-2025
Sensorium: Centre for Digital Art and Technology, in partnership with Connected Minds: Neural and Machine Systems for a Healthy, Just Society, seeks applications for our inaugural Connected Minds Artist-in-Residence.
Artist-in-Residence Program
The Connected Minds Artist-in-Residence program has three central aims:
1) To support artist-researchers from equity deserving groups who are using non-traditional forms of knowledge creation to actively address social impacts of emerging technologies on diverse communities and drive ethical technology development;
2) To maximize the transdisciplinary impact of artistic methodologies on the study of the techno-social collective across the Connected Minds Program and its three anchoring pillars: Intelligent Technologies; Neuroscience, Society;
3) Through artistic knowledge mobilization, to raise the international awareness of the innovative and community-engaged research undertaken through the Connected Minds program.
Through their period of residency with Sensorium and Connected Minds, the selected artist will be invited to develop a set of research-creation experiments that critically engage with ethical issues embedded in disruptive, emergent, and/or intelligent technologies (artificial intelligence, robotics, virtual and augmented reality, etc.). This engagement will include considering how issues of equity shape the design of new technologies and their impacts on diverse communities. The selected artist will hold a combination of talks, workshops, and studio/lab visits for members of the Connected Minds community to share skills and knowledge emerging from their practice and critical inquiry. At the culmination of their residency the artist will produce a body of work to be exhibited publicly in a creative format suitable to the nature of the research (e.g., performance, screening, installation).
The Artist-in-Residence will:
- Actively collaborate with students and faculty within Connected Minds and produce opportunities for training and engagement in the form of workshops, talks, studio/lab visits, etc. regularly throughout their residency (minimum one event every two months);
- Build opportunities for exchange across the three pillars of Connected Minds – Neuroscience, Intelligent Technologies, and Society – into their residency plan;
- Be on-site at a designated York University research space a minimum of one day per week on a regular basis (with the exception of research-related travel periods);
- Do studio/lab visits at Queen’s University at least twice during their residency;
- Prepare a body of work for public exhibition at the culmination of the residency;
- Participate in Sensorium and Connected Minds programming;
- Meet agreed upon deadlines as set out in the residency plan.
We are open to artists working in any medium. The successful applicant will have a demonstrable track record in research-based creative practice and at least two years of experience training or mentoring emerging artists. Both individual artists and collectives may apply, however the overall residency stipend will remain the same. Proposals will be adjudicated based on feasibility and alignment with the Connected Minds mandate. We especially encourage and prioritize applications from artists who identify as Indigenous and/or as a member of another equity-deserving group, as well as research that addresses experiences of underrepresented communities – Indigenous Peoples of Canada (i.e., First Nations, Inuit, Métis, or registered to a US tribe whose homelands straddle the colonial Canada/US border); African, Caribbean and Black individuals; racialized individuals; persons with disabilities; women; 2SLGBTQIA+; French linguistic minority). Persons of all nationalities are welcome to apply, however we are not able to cover relocation expenses. This opportunity is not open to current York or Queen’s University students or faculty. While Sensorium will administer the residency, the artist-in-residence may be affiliated with more than one Connected Minds-affiliated research centre at York and Queen’s.
The residency can be 6 months or 1 year in duration (depending on the nature of the proposed project), ideally taking place between September 1, 2024 and August 30, 2025, with the dates of the final exhibition to be negotiated with the artist-in-residence.
The Artist-in-Residence will receive:
- Stipend – $60,000 + benefits for 1 year residency, or $30,000 + benefits for 6-month residency
- Research, Materials, Community Engagement Budget – $8,500 for 1 year residency, or $4250 for 6-month residency
- Shared research space and assistance
- Access to York University Libraries
- Curatorial support for exhibition
- Photo and video documentation of their exhibition
In your application please include:
- A letter of interest (1 page)
- CV
- Project proposal (1000 words max.)
- Portfolio including 3 examples of recent research-creation work
- 1 letter of reference (appraisal of artistic work and ability to work with student trainees and participate productively in a collaborative, transdisciplinary setting)
- Budget for Research, Materials, and Community Engagement, including any external funds you may bring to the residency
Sensorium Team
People
Learn more about the Research Associates, Faculty Associates, Graduate Research Associates, Postdoctoral Fellows and Visiting Scholars who make up the vibrant research community of Sensorium and apply to become a member.
- Research Associates
- Faculty Associates
- Graduate Research Associates
- Postdoctoral Fellows
- Visiting Researchers
Research Associates participate in Sensorium's intellectual and creative life, submit and administer grants through the Centre, and/or are active in a research cluster and organize workshops and conferences.
We accept applications both from faculty within the Schools of the Arts, Media, Performance, and Design and those situated in faculties outside of AMPD
If you are interested in becoming a Sensorium Research Associate please complete and submit the following online application form.
Jennifer Fisher
Professor, Graduate Program in Art History, Dept. of Visual Art & Art History – AMPD
Magdalena Kazubowski
Graduate Program Director, Associate Professor, Dept. of Theatre, Dance & Performance – AMPD
Katherine Knight
Associate Professor, Dept. of Visual Art & Art History – AMPD
Courtney Ch’ng Lancaster
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Theatre, Dance & Performance – AMPD
Laura Levin
Associate Dean and Associate Professor, Dept. of Theatre, Dance & Performance – AMPD
Gabriel Levine
Sessional Assistant Professor of Drama and Creative Arts, Glendon Campus
Michael Longford
Graduate Program Director and Associate Professor, Digital Media, Dept. of Computational Arts – AMPD
Janine Marchessault
Graduate Program Director and Associate Professor, Dept. of Cinema & Media Arts – AMPD
Gabrielle Moser
Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director, Faculty of Education
Freya Björg Olafson
Assistant Professor, Dance
Jenifer Paparazzo
Director/Curator, Art Gallery of York University
Barbara Sellers-Young
Professor Emerita, Dept. of Dance – AMPD
Nell Tenhaaf
Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Visual Art & Art History – AMPD
Doug Van Nort
Canada Research Chair and Associate Professor, Dept. of Computational Arts/Music – AMPD
Faculty Associates participate in Sensorium more broadly by participating in workshops and attending events organized by the Centre.
- Dr. Chloë Brushwood-Rose, Associate Professor, Education
- Dr. Darcey Callison, Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director, Dance
- Dr. David Cecchetto, Associate Professor, Humanities
- Dr. Julie Crooks, Adjunct Faculty, Visual Art & Art History
- Marc Couroux, Associate Professor, Visual Art & Art History
- Gwenyth Dobie, Associate Professor, Theatre
- Dr. James Elder, Professor, Psychology
- Dr. Alison Harvey, Assistant Professor, School of Translation Studies, Glendon College
- Dr. Sharon Hayashi, Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director, Cinema & Media Studies
- Dr. Shelley Hornstein, Professor, Visual Art & Art History
- Dr. Anna Hudson, Associate Professor, Visual Art & Art History
- Dr. Leslie Korrick, Associate Professor, Visual Art & Art History
- Yam Lau, Associate Professor, Graduate Program in Visual Arts, Department of Visual Art & Art History
- Brenda Longfellow, Associate Professor, Cinema and Media Studies
- William Mackwood, Assistant Professor, Dance
- James McKernan, Assistant Professor, Theatre
- Dr. Natasha Myers, Associate Professor, Anthropology/Science & Technology Studies
- Dr. Eva Peisachovich, Associate Professor, School of Nursing
- Dr. Gabi Schaffzin, Assistant Professor, Department of Design
- Melissa Shiff, Research Associate
- Debashis Sinha, Department of Theatre
- Wendy Wong, Department of Design
- Dr. Laurie Wilcox, Professor, Psychology
- Dr. Mike Zryd, Associate Professor, Cinema and Media Studies
- Dr. Abigail Shabtay, Assistant Professor, Humanities
Graduate Research Associates are students registered in graduate programmes at York University and engaged in research which resonates with the mandate of Sensorium: Centre for Digital Arts and Technology. We accept applications both from graduate student researchers studying within the Schools of the Arts, Media, Performance, and Design and those situated in faculties outside of AMPD.
If you are interested in becoming a Sensorium Graduate Research Associate please complete and submit the following online application form.
Jackson Ainsworth
Communication and Culture
Jackson Ainsworth is a York Communication and Culture PHD Student who explores our material world through creative research practices. He is currently working on a project which investigates our interactions with every day devices, their materialities, and that impact on alienation and isolation. He received his BA in Sociology from Concordia
Hurmat Ul Ain
Theatre, Dance & Performance Studies
Hurmat Ul Ain is a Canadian-Pakistani artist and scholar. She is a PhD candidate with the Theatre, Dance, & Performance Studies program at York University. She holds an MFA in Performance Art from School of Art Institute Chicago where she was studying as a Fulbright Scholar. Ain is interested in discourse around body and its representation in Media and Arts. Through her practice, she explores identity and gender roles in context of socio-political rules of acceptability and sacrilege. Alongside, her independent practice, she has been collaborating with Rabbya Naseer since 2007 on different projects internationally.
Emmanuel Albano
Film
Emmanuel Albano is a human. In Canada he created “Frames,” a stereoscopic dance film that screened at the opening of Norman McLaren retrospective at RVQC festival in 2015. He’s been exploring immersive media from a decade now. He made his first Dome-show back in 2007 in Italy, and rediscovered the form in 2014 with SAT (The Society for Art and Technology of Montreal). He developed his first VR experience iBoxVR in 2017 and won several awards. In 2018. Emmanuel has many interests and cannot refrain from getting his hands dirty by exploring technology to find new ways of expression.
Chimira Nicole Andres
Earth and Space Sciences, Lassonde School of Engineering
Chimira is a PhD student, freelance contemporary ballet dancer that explores communicating Earth and space science digital data through dance movement. She is passionate about the interactions between the scientific and artistic community bridging the gap between STEAM through movement – Dance is a critical avenue where we can explore the development of space culture (i.e.choreography of space walks,human physiology in microgravity,etc) since gravity, or lack thereof, in space fundamentally transforms how the body moves!
Chimira’s research involves exploring Earth &planetary datasets (i.e.Mars topography)and translating these to dance/projection mapping using narrative charged-landscapes and sonified sounds of nature.
Derek Anderson
Theatre and Performance Studies
Derek Manderson is an interdisciplinary scholar and PhD candidate in Theatre and Performance Studies at York University. His research imbricates participatory theatre, game studies, and care ethics to reveal the affordances, boundaries, and dramaturgical structures of collaborative play. He has been published in Canadian Theatre Review, Theater, and CANNOPY. Derek holds a BA (Hons.) and BEd from Queen’s University, as well as an MA from York.
Kaede Ashizawa
Communications and Culture
Kaede Ashizawa is a Master’s student in the Graduate Communication and Culture Program. Her current work explores the use of Virtual Reality to tell stories of East Asian diasporic experiences, futurism, and self-fluidity. She is interested in the use of cybernetic/cyborg/posthuman aesthetics to reimagine what the human body and spirit can do to coexist with others in the human/non-human world.
Robert Appleton
Music
Robert Appleton’s Ph.D. vorTEX (visual+aural+textual), sets out to create a multimedia language of the senses, actualizing new understanding and discovery in art and science. “Exploring multimedia language through recently discovered connections among sense-energies explores a long overdue sanity for human communication.” A designer and visual music artist, Appleton’s work is in the collections of SF Moma, The Library of Congress, The Bibliotheque Nationale de France, The Vignelli Centre for Design Studies, and many others. His election to Alliance Graphique Internationale in 2001, his work with John Cage, Ornette Coleman Paul Dutton, Malcolm Goldstein, and Jin Hi Kim, as well as his careers in teaching (CAFA Beijing, Parsons School of Design, Cooper Union), photojournalism, art direction, and music, have been precursors to this.
Galit Ariel
Film and Media Studies
Galit is a creative that explores the wild and imaginative side of immersive technologies and their impact on our cultures, behaviours and interactions. She is passionate about a future in which technology is integrated into our everyday’s life but does not control it. Galit’s goal is to bridge the gap between digital, physical, and mental spaces to create tools and platforms that help people experience these worlds in new ways.
Sana Akram
Cinema and Media Arts
Sana Akram is a Pakistani urbanist, media maker and a Fulbright alum. In 2020, she graduated with a MS in Design and Urban Ecologies from Parsons School of Design, The New School, where she diversified her research-practice by implementing an interdisciplinary design approach. Her award-winning interactive documentary, Little Pakistan – Future Histories, has showcased at several international festivals and her research has been published in Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies. Currently, she is pursuing a research-creation doctorate in Cinema and Media Studies at York University as a recipient of the prestigious Elia Scholars Program Award.
Justin Baillargeon
Cinema and Media Studies
Justin Baillargeon is a VR/360 filmmaker, a SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship recipient and a Ph.D. candidate in Cinema and Media Studies at York University. He holds a B.A in Film Studies from Concordia University and a M.A. in Communication from the Université du Québec à Montréal. His doctoral research explores virtual reality, as well as 360 degrees curation and its distinct forms of spectatorship. He seeks to analyze spectator behavior and emotional involvement during various types of multi-sensory and embodied experiences whether seated, standing and room-scaled in different cultural contexts defined by commercial, educational and artistic objectives.
Emily Barton
Cinema and Media Studies
Emily Barton is a PhD student in the Cinema and Media Studies department. Her work thinks about queer films that are archival in nature, as well as the space of the queer archive and theatre, as a way of building queer community trans-historically.
Sophie Bisson
Music
Sophie Bisson is an opera singer and a doctoral candidate at York University where she is a graduate research associate of the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies (RCCS) and co-editor of RCCS’s Canada Watch (spring 2022 edition). She is also the creator and editor of the online Encyclopedia of Canadian Opera (spring 2022). A recipient of the Sunnuz Sarah Taheri Graduate Award in Fine Arts and a Helen Carswell Research Grant, she has written numerous reviews and articles featuring Canadian musical content. She has presented on topics that include how institutional policies influence the creation of opera in Canada, re-righting the wrongs of Louis Riel’s Kuyas, the evolution and themes of the Canadian aria, and articles on the revival of Claude Vivier’s opera Kopernikus. She also presents on and guides others through the challenges and possible solutions for disseminating large-scale digital humanities projects in music and in the arts in general. Sophie’s dissertation examines the representation of women in nine twenty-first century Canadian operas and her Helen Carswell research project revisits Canadian operatic history with an inclusive lens to highlight Black opera companies, works, and artists.
Alex Borkowski
Communication & Culture
Alex Borkowski is PhD student in Communication & Culture at York University. Her research interests include sound, performance, gender and contemporary art. She holds a BA in Art History from McGill University, and MA in Aural & Visual Cultures from Goldsmiths College, University of London. Her writing has appeared in The Quietus, KAPSULA, Canadian Art, and Prefix Photo, where she also acts as book reviews editor.
Ilze Briede [Kavi]
Digital Media
Ilze Briede [Kavi] is a Latvian/Canadian artist working across multiple disciplines. Her process-based artwork can be a video projection installation, interactive sculpture or a live performance. Besides working collaboratively, she is also interested in creating work that exists in the gap between the physical, tangible world and bodiless digitally created artforms, that she aims to co-join in new imaginary ways. Currently, a PhD student with a research focus on computational creativity and generative art, Kavi explores the potential narratives in Mixed Reality spaces.
Beau Han Bridge
Cinema and Media Studies
Beau Han Bridge is a Chinese Canadian filmmaker, theatre artist, and playwright. In 2017, he created Midtwenties Theatre Society, a non-profit theatre company that serves as a creative development space for mid-emerging artists practicing in theatre, film, and the multifaceted art of performance through a contemporary adolescent lens. In 2021, he was awarded a Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Canada graduate scholarship to develop an original thesis film that explores his Chinese Canadian roots through theatre scenography and chamber film aesthetics.
Laurence Butet-Roch
Environmental Studies
Laurence Butet-Roch is a PhD candidate in Environmental Studies at York, where she studies visual narratives of environmental contamination and systemic environmental racism. She completed a Masters in Digital Media (Ryerson), where she teaches Interactive Storytelling, a B.A. in International Relations (UBC) and a two-year training in photography at the School of Photographic Arts: Ottawa. A photographer, photo editor, writer and art educator, she contributes to Aperture, The British Journal of Photography, National Geographic, Photolife, Point of View, Polka Magazine, The New York Times Lens Blog, The New Yorker Photo Booth, amongst others.
Hannah Van Buuren
Cinema and Media Studies
Hannah van Buuren earned her BA in Motion Picture Arts at Capilano University where she produced various award-winning films, including Think Again (iGen Festival). Her current research analyzes contemporary television series, primarily focusing on the manipulation of linear temporality as a way of exploring the mediation of trauma and assault. Her other research interests include feminist filmmaking and subjectivity, counter-gazes, broadcast temporality and trauma studies.
Angel Callander
Art History and Visual Culture
Angel Callander is a writer and editor in Toronto. She holds a BA in Art History (University of Guelph, 2014) and an MA in Art History and Visual Culture (Humboldt University of Berlin, 2018). Her work takes an historical materialist approach to technology, feminism, structures of power, labour, and cultural production. Her writing can be found in CBC Arts, C Magazine, Canadian Art, Esse arts + opinions, and PUBLIC among others, as well as in Imagining Futures of Experimental Media (Pleasure Dome, NIMAC & OddSite Arts, 2023), Architecture and the Smart City (Routledge, 2019), and Interface Critique (Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2016).
Haoran Chang
Cinema and Media Studies
Haoran Chang is a digital media artist and researcher focusing on spatial computing media as an expanded media practice. His art practice and research think about the liminality of virtual space in relation to the physical and social space. Haoran Chang is also the founder of Chameleon Gallery, a Virtual Reality platform in curating and exhibiting art projects in both physical and virtual spaces.
Aadita Chaudhury
Science and Technology Studies
I am a PhD candidate at the Department of Science and Technology Studies at York University. My core research interests for my PhD project are the implications of human-nature interactions as part of ecological research work explored through practices of mediating fire across multiple sites in the domains of science, forestry, environmental management, arts practices and public discourse. I seek to understand how, broadly defined, fire, and the process of combustion are understood and evolve in their meaning-making and world-building capacity alongside histories of race, capitalism and empire.
Emily Collins
Cinema and Media Studies
Emily Collins is an interdisciplinary cultural researcher, writer, and PhD student in Cinema and Media Studies at York University with professional experience in project and event coordination, independent arts publishing, teaching, and digital distribution across research networks, arts organizations and public institutions, including Archive/Counter-Archive, PUBLIC Journal, VUCAVU, TIFF, Festival Scope, and the Walter Phillips Gallery at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. Working across sound studies, feminist theory, critical disability studies, and decolonial theory, Emily’s doctoral work explores sonic ecologies of difference, resistance and care within contemporary film/media, which forge a new body of emancipatory artworks and creative practices.
Frances Dorenbaum
Art History and Visual Culture
Frances Dorenbaum is a curator and a PhD candidate studying the history of photography in the Department of Art History and Visual Culture at York University. Her current research focuses on settler-colonial representations of Canadian national identity in twentieth-century news photographs. She has curated and collaborated on numerous exhibitions, most recently at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York, the Chicago History Museum, and the Image Centre (IMC) at Toronto Metropolitan University. She was the 2020 Elaine Ling Research Fellow at the IMC.
Annie Dunning
Visual Art
Annie Dunning maintains a multidisciplinary practice, based in sound-sculpture. She holds a BFA from Mount Allison University, NB and an MFA from the University of Guelph, ON. With support from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council she has produced and shown work across Canada and abroad. Past exhibitions include “Echo/Locations” (2016) Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, and participation in “City Sonic” (2017) international sound art festival, Charloi Belgium. She was selected as a participant in the Ayatana Biophony Research Residency (2019) and is developing new sound-sculpture for “Exercises in Listening” at Two Rivers Gallery BC (2020).
Adam Faux
Music
Adam is a PhD student at York University, researching Synaesthetic and ProcessComposition. For roughly 20 years, Adam has made music using the Digital Audio Workstation to accompany film, dance, song writing and live performance, and most recently worked in varied disciplines that include the Filipino Rondalla, and Swahili music and culture. Adam has toured North America performing his own musical creations as a front man for a punk band, as a producer/engineer for indie and jazz recordings, and as the Front of House engineer showcasing the latest thing. He teaches music for The Doane USchool, as well as for The Regent Park School of Music, focusing on at-risk kids and teens.
Emily Follett-Campbell
Communication & Culture
Emily Follett-Campbell is a writer and PhD student in Communication and Culture, a joint program at York University and Toronto Metropolitan University. She has a MA in Digital Innovation in Journalism Studies from Concordia University in Montreal, where she has also worked as an Adjunct Professor of Technical Writing and Communication and Argumentation and Composition for Engineers, and a background in digital marketing and theatre. Currently, she lives Toronto with her son, Gavin.
Marcus A. Gordon
Digital Media
Marcus A. Gordon is a PhD student in Digital Media at York, studying algorithmic composition and generative art with a focus on live coding and archimusic. He holds an MFA in Digital Futures from OCAD University where he learned holography and began his research on the subject of the transplane image. He continues his research with the nd::Studio Lab working on volumetric displays as visual music instruments. As an Advisory Board Member with the Innovation Council of the Toronto Public Library, Marcus advocates for digital literacy and creative coding in the arts and sciences.
Laurel Green
Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies
Laurel Green (she/her) is an artist, producer, and scholar who creates invitation to participate and provocations for change. She is a nationally recognized dramaturg and creative producer of new work, from world premiere plays to gameful performances, digital experiences, gardening installations, and community activations. As a PhD Student in the Graduate Program in Theatre, Dance, & Performance Studies, York University , Laurel’s doctoral research integrates participatory performance, games, design frameworks, and digital technologies for social change. She holds an Masters degree from the University of Toronto, and is a Trainee with Connected Minds. laurel-green.com
Grace Grothaus
Computational Arts and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Departments’ Digital Media Program
Grace Grothaus is a computational media artist whose research-creation encompasses environmental sensing, physical computing and speculative futurity. Her projects have been exhibited widely, including the International Symposium of Electronic Art, Environmental Crisis: Art & Science in London, UK, Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris, and the World Creativity Biennale in Brazil. Grothaus has received awards for her work from organizations such as the United States National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts. Currently, Grothaus is currently working towards a PhD in Digital Media from York University where she is a VISTA scholar and Graduate Fellow of Academic Distinction.
Nick Fox-Gieg
Digital Media
Nick Fox-Gieg is a researcher, animator, and developer in Toronto. Recently, he’s been working on XR projects for the Verizon 5G EdTech Challenge, NYT T Brand Studio, the University of Waterloo, Google Creative Lab, and Framestore. His awards include a 2017 Engadget Alternate Realities grant, Eyebeam and Fulbright Fellowships, and the jury prize for Best Animated Short at SXSW 2010; his work has also been shown at the Ottawa, Rotterdam, and TIFF film festivals, at the Centre Pompidou, and on CBC TV. Fox-Gieg holds an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts and a BFA from Carnegie Mellon University.
David Han
Cinema & Media Studies
David Han is a media artist, scholar and educator whose work employs emerging technology to explore the boundaries between computation, cinema, and immersive media. His current practice employs a structuralist approach to probe the unique affordances of virtual reality (VR) and aims to understand and expand the range of possibilities for creative practice in VR. His doctoral research was awarded a Joseph-Armand Bombardier Doctoral Scholarship by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
Racelar Ho
Digital Media
Racelar Ho is a PhD student in Digital Media at York University. She primarily focuses on ‘the viability of digital games as an independent genre of fine arts’, ‘the history, development, and discourses features of computer-generated arts’, ‘the influence of dialogues methodologies between creators and audiences under infinite virtual environments’ and seeks a way to smooth the gaps within science and humanities. As an artist, to construct a hybrid-infinite world to express her poetic thoughts about Zen dialogues in different dimensions and to explore the idealistic world of transcendent beings are vital aims of her creation.
Rory Hoy
Digital Media
Rory Hoy is a PhD student in Digital Media, and a researcher in the DisPerSion Lab at York University. His work is aimed at the crossroads between sonic ecosystems, agent simulation, networked music, and human/machine collaboration. Exploring the musical potential of artificial life systems, his work places performers as equals with virtual beings inspired by natural processes to investigate resulting perceptual and performative outcomes of their interplay. Rory holds both an MA and BA Hons in Digital Media from York University.
Lauren Howard
Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies
Lauren Howard is a feminist art historian and PhD student in the faculty of Gender, Feminist, and Women’s Studies at York University. Broadly, her research centres around visual representations of trauma, memory, and healing. Her current work studies how art and aesthetics might hold the potential to negotiate, mediate, and reconcile with unprocessed memories of trauma and abuse.
Meng Jian
Communication and Culture
Meng is an MA student in the Ryerson and York joint program Communication and Culture focusing on the Technology in Practice stream and she holds a BFA in Photography Studies from Ryerson University. After four years of working for the Ryerson Image Centre, she decided to continue pursuing the study of critical examination of contemporary art through interdisciplinary practice. She is a research assistant for Dr. Paul Moore’s Circuits of Cinema project and collaborates with the Digital Media Experience Lab and the Archives and Special Collections at Ryerson University. Her current research project looks at how art archives evolve in the current diverse media culture, and what potential exists for multi-sensory technologies to contribute to this shift.
Sunlei Jin
Digital Media
As a Toronto-based artist and recent graduate of Queen’s University, my creative journey has been a fusion of cutting-edge technology and traditional artistic forms. I specialize in crafting immersive spaces that seamlessly blend 3D techniques with age-old artistic media. My artistic repertoire spans a diverse range, from 2D hand-made animations to captivating short narrative films, mesmerizing AR & VR artworks, and awe-inspiring immersive space exhibitions. In my ongoing artistic journey, I aspire to pioneer the fusion of hybrid reality technology with corporeal installation art, marrying data visualization with traditional artistic forms.
Megan Johnson
Theatre & Performance Studies
Megan Johnson is a performance scholar, arts administrator, singer, and dramaturg based in Toronto, Canada. She is currently a PhD student in the Theatre & Performance Studies department at York University. Megan holds an MA in theatre & performance studies from York University, an MA in musicology from the University of Ottawa, as well as a BMus in voice from Acadia University. Her research — centered on disability performance, infrastructural politics, and inclusive dramaturgy — explores how the creation practices of disability-identified performers in Canada dialogue with notions of disability justice. Megan’s research is supported by the Elia Scholars Program at York University and a Joseph-Armand Bombardier CGS Doctoral Scholarship (SSHRC).
Vladimir Kanic
Visual Arts MFA
Vladimir Kanic is the creator of living algae sculptures that use spectators’ breath as food and convert it into oxygen while mitigating the effects of climate change. His world-building practice imagines living algae sculptures as beacons of decarbonized future, where social and climate justice are collaborative public acts as essential as breathing. Vladimir’s living sculptures have been exhibited throughout Canada and featured on TED talk platform. He graduated OCAD University as the Governor General’s Academic Medal and Sir Edmund Walker Award recipient along with CIBC Fine Arts Award, Mitacs Business Strategy Award, and InterAccess Media Prize.
Tiva Kawakami
Environmental Studies
Tiva (she/her) is a Master’s student in Environmental Studies. Her research centers plant-human relations to unpack settler colonialism and contemporary Settler identities in Turtle Island/Canada. tiva attends to her research questions through art: she explores multispecies ethnographic film and land-based learning in hopes of illuminating humans’ relational capacities and fostering community flourishing. tiva feels deeply inspired by her grandparents and incorporates her positionality as a Settler-Michif woman into her work.
Miranda Kerridge
Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies
Miranda Kerridge is an interdisciplinary artist currently based out of Toronto. She graduated with her BFA (Specialization in acting for the Theatre) from Concordia in 2021. Her practice centers around acting, devised performance, and visual arts. She is a founder of the Cardinal collective and works with them to produce over a dozen shows and counting around Toronto. She would describe her works as surreal, poetic images, that take advantage of modern media. She is currently receiving her MA in Theatre from York to develop and actualize her original works and her skills as a writer, artist, and researcher.
Aida Khorsandi
Music
Aida Khorsandi is a musician, educator, and emerging researcher originally from Tehran, currently residing in Toronto. As a PhD student in the Music Department at York University, Aida is studying the onto-epistemology of haptic listening and sounding within the context of sonic interactions. Aida’s multi and transdisciplinary research interests reside in music, sound studies, epistemology, interactive art, and technology, within the framework of situated knowledge. She worked (and works) with New Media Society, an artist-run centre in Tehran, and organized talks, events, and exhibitions inside and outside Iran. Aida attends to field recording, sound design, and digital music creation.
Deanne Kearney
Dance
Deanne Kearney is a current Ph.D. student in York University’s Dance Studies program. Her research follows the interactions between dance and the online world, investigating transforming traditions in the dance industry due in the age of technology. Kearney is a commercial and hip hop dancer in Toronto. As well as a freelance dance writers, and dance critic for Mooney on Theatre. Deannekearney.com
Caroline Klimek
Cinema and Media Arts
Caroline Klimek is a PhD Candidate in Cinema and Media Arts at York University and a recipient of the SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship. Her research interests include film festivals, media industry studies, digital archiving, and emerging technologies. She is published in the Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Shameless Magazine and TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies.
Hailey Kobrin
Art History and Visual Culture
Hailey Kobrin (they/them) is a GTA-based writer, researcher, curator, and artist. Hailey is a self-proclaimed “Food Freak,” navigating a lifetime obsession with the culinary through fine arts, research and creative written work. Hailey holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Criticism and Curatorial Practices from OCAD University, and is a current MA Candidate in the department of Art History and Visual Culture at York University.
Diane Kolin
Music
Diane Kolin is a candidate in MA in Musicology. She did her undergrad studies in theatre and music in Paris, France. She also has a bachelor in software development and is a PMP project manager. Her research in the field of music and disability with a critical disability studies point of view has brought her to meet and collaborate with musicians all over the world.
Joseph Konieczny
Art History and Visual Culture
Joe Konieczny is a writer, educator, and student in the Art History and Visual Culture program at York University. His research focuses primarily on the cultural history of the Swahili Coast, with a particular emphasis on postcolonial theory and archival epistemology. Joe’s thesis work focuses on emerging philosophies of representation in artist’s run centres on the continent, and the ways in which their affiliate staff and artists engage with a western academy and public that have resisted decolonization. Outside of the classroom, he is the president of the Art History Grad Student Association and facilitates a monthly art criticism group.
Jessie Krahn
Cinema & Media Studies
Jessie Krahn is a York Elia Scholar and a PhD student in cinema studies researching notions of authorship on social media. Jessie’s interests have led her to study horror cinema as well, with her forthcoming article in The New Review of Film and Television Studies, “‘Breathe in for your Vitality’: The Breath as the Nexus of Meaning in Ari Aster’s Midsommar” exploring the relationship between cinematic audiences and breathing bodies on-screen. Her writing has appeared in Conversation Canada, IDEAH and other venues. Jessie’s wider portfolio is accessible through https://www.jessiekrahn.com
Anna Lippman
Sociology
Anna is a PhD candidate in sociology at York University. She studies how hip-hop inspires young people to use their sociological imagination. Anna is studies how identity is shaped both through hip-hop culture and social institutions. She looks at how race, space, place, class, and gender shape how young people understand themselves and their place in the world. Anna is a 3rd generation Ashkenzi Jewish migrant on Turtle Island and first-generation settler in Canada. Anna is a grassroots organizer in Toronto where she tries to understand her role and stake in equity for all and practice praxis.
Eva Lu
Art History and Visual Culture
Eva Lu is a Ph.D. student in Art History and Visual Culture. Her research on contemporary East Asian art sounds out transcultural identity making as textured by new media such as AI, XR, and bioart. Her dissertation investigates the cultural politics of Taiwan’s participation in international exhibitions, and diasporic artists’ and curators’ expressions of subversion and dissidence.
Wen Luo
Digital Media
Wen Luo is an artist working across multiple disciplines. Her artwork (creation-as-research) integrates design, installation, sculpture, and mixed media. She holds an MFA in Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, and is currently pursuing a degree in Digital Media at York University. Her research interests are centered on how spatial theory can facilitate a more seamless integration of diverse visual presentations, thereby expanding the dimensions of spatial representation to establish deeper emotional connections with viewers. The ultimate goal is to explore human-centered approaches that create emotionally resonant artworks. She is studying with Michael Longford and Mark-David Hosale and has joined n-D::StudioLab.
Kristie MacDonald
Visual Art
Kristie MacDonald is visual artist working across photography, printmaking, and installation. Her practice engages notions of the archive and the collection, as well as their roles in the evolving meanings and contextual histories of images and artifacts. She holds an MFA from York University and an MI (Spec. Archival Studies) from the University of Toronto. She is currently a PhD candidate in the department of Visual Art at York University, and an Assistant Professor at the University of Guelph in the Studio Art Program.
Andrew McConnell
Digital Media
Andrew McConnell is a member of Nipissing First Nation, living in Toronto. He is currently a course director for the Waaban teacher education program at York University, and is pursuing his PhD in Digital Media at the Lassonde School of Engineering. He was the coordinator for Indigenous education and consultant at the YRDSB from 2016 to 2023 and a teacher at the board for almost 20 years. Before teaching, Andrew worked in the media, first at Aboriginal Voices, a Native arts magazine based in Toronto, and then at CTV News, where he worked in production for 7 years.
Hrysovalanti Fereniki Maheras
Digital Media
Hrysovalanti Fereniki Maheras is a PhD student in Digital Media at York University and she is studying with Dr. Mark-David Hosale as a researcher at nD::StudioLab. She holds a B.A. Hons in Media Arts from Plymouth University, UK and an M.A. in Digital Media from York University, CA. In her research, she speculates on the innovation of computational machines as emotional beings, as she navigates the connections between the philosophical theories written about the human soul, and the cybernetic theories and artworks created for the exploration of the mind of technology. Her practice emphasizes on the creation of groups of electronic sound/kinetic sculptures that act as artificially living communities. Transversing between the virtual and the physical world, she explores the creation of a virtual analog environment emerging in a shared complex physical habitat.
Jon McSpadden
Music
Jon McSpadden is a multi-instrumentalist, producer, instructor, and student currently pursuing a Ph.D. in the music department at York University in Toronto, Ontario. Jon’s work focuses on the study of soundscapes and their impact on people within specific sound environments. Current projects include the study of casino soundscapes and their role in manipulating gambling habits, as well as a survey of discourse surrounding the barrier between music and noise and how this applies to contemporary music production.
Jayna Mees
Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies
Jayna Mees (she/her) is an artist-scholar who specializes in accessibility consultation, dramaturgy, and devised theatre. Situated at the intersections between performance studies and critical disability studies, Jayna’s doctoral research at York University examines access aesthetics, practices, and politics within digital and virtual forms of immersive and site-specific performance. Jayna holds an MA from the Centre for Drama, Theatre, & Performance Studies at University of Toronto and a BA in Theatre from York University. Some recent projects include: Accessibility Coordinator for the SummerWorks Performance Festival (2021 -22), and Assistant Dramaturg for SpiderWebShow’s VR production of You Should Have Stayed Home (2022).
Jules Mills
Visual Arts
Jules D. Mills (they/them/theirs) is an interdisciplinary artist and arts organizer of settler descent raised in Saskatchewan. In 2016 they received their BFA from Emily Carr University of Art and Design and are currently a MFA candidate at York University. Their work investigates and invents new takes on historical and mythical gendered performance through interdisciplinary means such as parody, movement, costume, sculpture, and video. Mills has exhibited work within Canada and internationally. In 2019 they were an artist in residence at the Banff Centre for the Arts and Creativity. Mills is co-organizer of the mobile curatorial project Number 3 Gallery.
Sonya Mwambu
Film
Sonya Mwambu is an experimental filmmaker and editor based in Toronto. Born in Kampala, they grew up in Canada and their work centres on the intersections of their identities through the exploration of race, gender, language and the connections they find through the experimentations of analogue film. Mwambu holds a BFA in Film Production from York University.
Phyllis Novak
Theatre & Performance Studies
Phyllis Novak (aka Nowakowski) am a social practice artist with roots in theatre performance, working across arts disciplines. I have been active with art-makers and young people from across Canada in the development of SKETCH, for almost thirty years. I am a fellow of the inaugural Toronto Cultural Leaders Lab and a Master’s student in the Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University. I am also a graduate of York’s Theatre with a BFA in Theatre Performance. I have been part of strategic collaborations like Platform A, AVNU and YSI – initiatives advancing young people’s opportunities in the arts.
Michael Palumbo
Digital Media
Michael Palumbo (MA, BFA) is an electroacoustic music improviser, coder, and researcher. His PhD research spans distributed creativity, temporality, intersubjectivity, and version control systems, and is expressed through recent projects ‘git show’, a distributed, electroacoustic music composition and digital music instrument design experiment, and ‘Modular Synthesis in Virtual Reality’ (MSVR). He is studying with Dr. Doug Van Nort as a researcher in the Distributed Performance and Sensorial Immersion Lab, and also works at the Alice Lab for Computational Worldmaking.
Michaela Pnacekova
Cinema and Media Studies
Interactive creator and producer. In 2017, Michaela co-created and produced her first interactive app Pre-Crime Calculator. She is also developing the Pre-Crime detective reality game. Her first VR piece A Symphony of Noise had its premiere at Reeperbahn Music Festival 2019. She has also produced three feature length documentaries and two short films. The documentary BORDER CUT won Special Mention at the Bosch Stiftung East-European Co-Production Prize 2014. WATERPROOF won EWA Award 2017 and will premiere at DOK Leipzig 2019 and IDFA 2019. Since September 2019, she is a PhD candidate at York University where she explores new media.
Sheetal Prasad
Education
Sheetal Prasad is a Ph.D. candidate and SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship recipient in the Faculty of Education at York University. She holds a Honours BFA in Studio Art with History minor at McMaster University and a MFA in Interdisciplinary Art, Media and Design at OCAD University. Her current research examines representation within Canadian secondary history classrooms and how history textbooks and curricula can be interrogated through multimodal learning and engagement. With her background in fine art, she combines archival and art research methods to create augmented reality works that inform viewers of multiple perspectives in Canadian history.
Dhvani Ramanujam
Communication and Culture
Dhvani Ramanujam is a Toronto-based writer, emerging curator, and MA student in the joint Communication and Culture program at York University and Ryerson University. Her research and curatorial practice focuses on screen cultures and moving image, particularly attuned to queer, feminist, decolonial and speculative archival practices in contemporary exhibitions. Her other research interests extend to cyber-feminisms, sonic geographies, and the rise of experimental and avant-garde streaming services. She is currently a member of the Studio for Media Activism and Critical Thought (SMACT) at Ryerson University, where she most recently co-curated the latest virtual edition of the Laboratory for Feminist Memory.
Casey Robertson
Humanities
Casey Robertson is a PhD student in Humanities at York University in Toronto, Ontario with interdisciplinary research interests spanning across continental philosophy, gender studies, and musicology/sound studies. Previously Casey received an Honours BA in Music (minoring in Philosophy) from Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, additionally completing the Sonic Design program in applied new media at Carleton’s School of Arts and Culture. Casey also received an MA in Humanities from California State University, Dominguez Hills in Carson, California. As a musician, activist, and community organizer, Casey is frequently involved in various equity-centered initiatives and projects throughout the Greater Toronto Area.
SK Sabada
Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies
SK Sabada is an artist and PhD student in Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies program at York. Their research and artistic practice focus on fostering critical intimacies of death and dying through the use of alternate reality games (ARGs). They are particularly intrigued by how these intimacies intersect with the experiences of mad-queer-trans people and what potentialities might emerge from fostering these intimacies in alternate reality settings.
Cleo Sallis-Parchet
Cinema and Media Studies
With a deep interest in community building and collaborative programming, Cleo Sallis-Parchet has coordinated arts projects in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver since 2012. Cleo is a PhD student in Cinema and Media Studies at York University. Recently, she worked as Education & Outreach Coordinator at InterAccess, a gallery and production studio dedicated to supporting new media art practices. Her current research explores the preservation of new media and digital art and the role of the institution in archiving obsolete technologies, ephemeral art, and collective memories.
Daniella Sanader
Art History & Visual Culture
Daniella Sanader is a writer and reader who lives in Toronto. Her writing on art has appeared in Canadian Art, Artforum.com, C Magazine, BlackFlash Magazine, Border Crossings, Maclean’s, The Brooklyn Rail, esse magazine, and others. Her texts have also been published by a number of galleries and artist-run spaces across Canada and internationally. She has held positions at Gallery TPW, the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, Oakville Galleries and others, and was a participant in the 2018 Critical Art Writing Ensemble at the Banff Centre. She is currently a PhD Student in Art History and Visual Culture at York University.hkjhkjhkjhkjh
Omar Shabbar
Digital Media
Omar Shabbar is a PhD student in the Digital Media program at York University. As a gigging musician, Omar has always been interested in how instruments are built and how they work. This interest continues to inform his research interests which focuses on player-instrument interaction, instrument materiality, and new instrument creation. Beyond this, Omar is interested in machine learning and AI, the musical traditions of North Africa, West Asia, and South Asia, and creating fully-immersive, multi-media experiences.
Rojin Shafiei
Film
Rojin Shafiei is an Iranian interdisciplinary artist living and working in Toronto. Rojin received her bachelor of fine arts in Intermedia from Concordia University in Montreal in 2017 and currently, she is a master of fine art candidate in Film Production at York University of Toronto. She has screened and exhibited her work internationally in various festivals.
In 2019 she was the VeniceLands Art Prize candidate in Italy in 2019 and she won the grand prize of Startupfest/Artupfest section in July 2018 for her piece I wait for the time.
Claudia Sicondolfo
Cinema & Media Studies
Claudia Sicondolfo is a Vanier Scholar and PhD Candidate in the Graduate Department of Film. Her research projects address: film festivals, screen publics, youth and digital media cultures, decolonizing research methodologies and affect in the creative industries. Her doctoral research project examines educational and community outreach strategies within contemporary Canadian digital screen institutions and digital engagement in film festivals. Her research appears in Public Journal and Senses of Cinema, in addition to various book anthologies. Claudia has worked with educational communities across Canada and has published educational companion curriculum for documentaries.
Amy Siegel
Communication and Culture
Amy Siegel is an artist, academic, educator, and organizer of artistic projects. Working at the intersection of film, performance and socially-engaged art, Amy works across media to tell stories based in themes of social justice. Amy is currently enrolled in a doctoral program in Communication & Culture at York University and is the Creative Director of the ReFrame Film Festival in Nogojiwanong/Peterborough, Ontario.
Omid Shakiba
Cinema & Media Studies
Omid is a filmmaker/cinematographer with 20 years’ experience, directing 30 documentaries, experimental and fictions. He holds an MA in digital filmmaking from University of Bradford in England, taught film courses for 4 years, came to Canada by Hot-Docs Film Festival’s invitation and started teaching Directing in the “BFTV” at Sheridan College from 2020. Recipient of the TAC Grant for Newcomer Artists twice, a jury member of BIPOC International film festival in 2022, and the panel review member for “Newcomer Arts Award” in 2023. Omid’s research is about the portrayal of Kurdish female fighters of Syria in transnational feminist cinema.
Kanishka Sikri
Gender, Feminist & Women’s Studies
Kanishka Sikri (kanishkasikri.com) is a writer and theorist thinking about violability: the practice that marks certain lives, bodies, and lands to the possibility of violence. They are currently a PhD candidate at York University speculating on the ways violence becomes synonymous with and inhabits the flesh. Kanishka asks how we may speak about violence, lay it bare, grieve and mourn its many insidious faces without replicating the notion that certain lives are violable and capable of being violated.
Myrtle Sodhi
Faculty of Education
Myrtle Sodhi is a Canada Graduate scholar and PhD candidate at York University in the Faculty of Education. She is an artist, writer, and researcher. Her research focus is Black feminist thought, Afrocentric thought, research-creation and their application in re-designing systems within institutions and organizations. Through her work with community organizations, she has been invited to be a guest speaker, facilitate workshops, and conduct research projects. Her latest publication, Trans-Temporal Collaborators in Research-Creation published by Brill explores Afrocentric orientation to arts-based research. Visit www.myrtlehenrysodhi.ca to learn more about her work.
Shabnam Sukhdev
Theatre and Performance Studies
Shabnam Sukhdev is a national award winning filmmaker and educator who has previously worked in the Mumbai film and television industry in the capacity of writer, director and producer of television shorts and serials for over 15 years. Driven by a strong social conscience, her films revolve around core issues of identity and culture, feminism and sexuality, migration and mental health. She is currently pursuing her PhD in Theatre and Performance Studies at York University, Toronto, where she is researching the transformative power of performance in family therapy.
Joshua Swamy
Dance
Joshua Swamy is a self-taught breaker from Pickering, Ontario. While completing an undergraduate degree in Philosophy and MA in Dance, his studies focus on conceptual ideas of perception, language and communication in dance, performance and physical movement. Currently his Ph.D dissertation explores human performance within digital realities. He is currently the acting co-chair of the Graduate Dance Association and acting member of the Dance BIPOC Action Group.
Lia Tarachansky
Cinema & Media Studies
Lia Tarachansky is an Israeli-Canadian journalist and filmmaker born in Soviet Union Ukraine. She has made several short, experimental, and feature films and worked as a Middle East correspondent, filing dozens of video reports and directing feature-length investigative documentaries for BBC World, The Guardian, TeleSUR, and Naretiv Productions. Her films won awards and toured globally. Lately she’s been making experimental, poetic shorts, spending her days filming life on her smartphone, designing lesson plans, and reading barely-comprehensible books for her PhD in Media Studies. For more info, check out www.liatarachansky.com and www.naretivproductions.com
Ella Tetrault
Visual Art
Ella Tetrault (*1983) is a Canadian artist. She holds an MFA in Public Art and New Artistic Strategies from the Bauhaus University (2011-2013) and a BA in International Development from the University of Toronto (2003-2008). She is co-founder of the Fuller Terrace Lecture Series. Tetrault is currently a PhD. candidate in the Department of Visual Art at York University, and a sessional instructor at the University of Cologne in the Institute for Art and Art Theory alongside Stefanie Busch. In 2017, she co-edited her first book with Konstanze Schütze, Alain Bieber and the NRW Forum, Pizza is God.
George Turnbull
Cinema & Media Studies
George Turnbull is an award-winning stage and screen scholar and practitioner. Currently, he is a PhD student in the Cinema and Media Studies program at York University where he is the President of the Graduate Film Student Association and a Research Assistant for the Academic Innovation Fund eLearning @ AMPD: Phase 3 project under the Institute for Research on Digital Learning. Growing up as a rigorous competitive dancer in Canada and the United States, Turnbull realized his interest and passion for dance films. He now specializes in screendance and contributes to the field through filmmaking, conference presentations and publications.
Mila Volpe
Dance
Mila Volpe is an emerging Dance/Movement Therapist working with diverse populations in both educational and clinical settings. Both her research as a student and practice as a professional involve the impact of digital and bio technologies on our overall experience of health. She is interested in the psychobiological basis of emotion and expression, neuroaesthetics, polyvagal informed somatic interventions, and exploring dance for health. Her writing has focused on the ethical implications of emergent work by biotech artists as well as the importance of place, environment, and culture to the Dance/Movement Therapy context.
Nava Waxman
Visual Art
Nava Waxman is a Canadian visual artist who lives and works in Toronto. Her practice engaged with Ideas of movement and temporality with notions of identity. Her work has been exhibited nationally and abroad. She holds a BA in Social Science and communication, and currently an MFA Candidate at York University, Toronto. Nava is a recipient of grants from the Ontario art council, Canada art council and The SSHRC Joseph Armand Bombardier Graduate Scholarship-Master’s.
Shalon T. Webber-Heffernan
Theatre & Performance Studies
Shalon T. Webber-Heffernan is a curator, writer, and Ph.D. student in the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies at York University. She is currently curator in residence at the Curatorial Lab @ Sensorium and has been independently curating interdisciplinary, live performance events since 2016. She recently worked as Assistant Curator with Toronto’s 7a*11d International Festival of Performance Art, and was previously involved as Exhibition Coordinator of a touring project entitled #callresponse at grunt gallery in Vancouver. She has presented her work at the Universities Art Association of Canada (UAAC), Trans-In-Corporados conference at Rio de Janeiro, and is chairing a panel in July 2019 at Performance Studies international (PSi) in Calgary. In 2019, Shalon published an article in Performance Matters journal for a special edition called “Performance and Bodies-Politic,” edited by Peter Dickinson and Róisín O’Gorman.
Simone White
Cinema and Media Studies
Simone is a first year Graduate Student in the Cinema and Media Studies Program at York University. She has an academic background in English, Philosophy and Communications and a practical background in media and communication oriented fields, including Social Media Management, Content Curation, and Independent Filmmaking. Simone’s interests lie in literature, cinema and culture, with a focus on the exploration of existentialism, absurdism, and postmodernism in regards to the human experience. With a passion for storytelling and communicating new and underrepresented stories to the world, Simone hopes to one day work professionally in the film and media production industry.
Zhino Yousefi
Digital Media
Zhino Yousefi is an Iranian-Canadian artist and engineer based in the California Bay Area. With a Master’s in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Toronto and an MFA in Digital Futures from OCAD University, her work bridges art and technology. Inspired by Iranian cultural heritage, Zhino creates immersive installations using Virtual Reality, electronics, and 3D design to explore themes of home, diaspora, and existentialism. She crafts interactive, healing spaces that invite touch, engagement, and reflection. By challenging traditional art forms, Zhino sparks conversations about life’s deeper questions, fostering connection and meaningful dialogue through her creations.
Gabriele Aroni
Communication and Culture (2020)
Gabriele Aroni has a MArch. (University of Florence, Italy) and an MSc in Digital Media Production (Oxford Brookes University, UK). He worked as a designer for Studio Roosegaarde in the Netherlands and is a member of the Florence University Multilanguage Cultural Heritage Lexis Research Project. He is the author of Gli Ordini Architettonici di San Lorenzo (Mimesis 2016) and published articles in Southern Semiotics Review and Well Played. He is currently teaching at the Ryerson School of Interior Design and completed a PhD on architecture in digital games in the Communication and Culture Program at Ryerson and York University.
Nicole Clouston
Visual Art
Nicole Clouston completed her Ph.D. in Visual Art at York University in Toronto. In her practice, she asks: What happens when we acknowledge, through an embodied experience, our connection to a world teeming with life both around and inside us? Nicole has exhibited across Canada and internationally, most recently in Detroit, Michigan. She was the artist in residence at the Coalesce Bio Art Lab at the University at Buffalo and the artist in residence at Idea Projects: Ontario Science Centre’s Studio Residencies at MOCA.
Scott Christian
Music
Scott Christian is a Toronto-based musical director and composer. His musicals Hero & Leander (based on the Greek myth) and Through The Gates (based on the early life of Buddha Gautama) premiered at the Toronto Summerworks Festival, and his musical A Misfortune (based on Anton Chekhov’s short story) premiered at the Charlottetown Festival in 2017. He has composed for short films, animation and dance. He is an in-demand coach and collaborative pianist for pop, classical and theatre singers. Scott is also a musical director at Second City Toronto.
Sarah Choi
Cinema and Media Studies
Sarah Choi is a screendance artist and curator who also aspires to be a comedic improvisor. She completed her MA in the Department of Cinema and Media Studies at York and her research interests include kinesthetic empathy, VR dance, as well as ethnography. Upon completing her undergraduate studies in Biology, Sarah made a leap of faith by moving to New York City to study documentary filmmaking. Sarah won the Best Director Award at the Atlanta International Documentary Film Festival in 2012 and founded the Lights Dance Festival in 2016. Please visit www.lightsdancefest.com for more information.
Christina Dovolis
Cinema and Media Studies
Christina is an interdisciplinary urban planner and filmmaker, working with both new media technologies and archives. Her research seeks to document how community and identity are constructed through digital architectures, and make virtual landscapes more legible and accessible to the broader public as a community-building tool. Christina holds a BA in Geography and Cultural Studies from McGill University and a MA in Urban Planning from the National University of Singapore. She is currently completing a MFA in Film Production at York University.
Margaryta Golovchenko
Art History
Margaryta Golovchenko is a settler-immigrant, poet, critic, and academic based in Tkaronto/Toronto, Treaty 13 and Williams Treaty territory, Canada. The author of two poetry chapbooks, she completed MA in art history at York University. Her research interests center around questions of performativity, objecthood, and femininity.
Allan Gomes
Design
Allan Gomes is a graphic designer who completed his Master of Design at York University. He received his Bachelor in Design at the Faculty of Design of the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) in Brazil. He also had an academic exchange of a full-year study in the Bachelor of Arts in Design Communications program at Athlone Institute of Technology (AIT) in Ireland. Allan’s academic background in addition to his professional experience over the past decade working as a senior graphic designer has brought him closer to the field of packaging design, which he intends to continue on another level from now on.
Sergio Guerra
Environmental Science
Sergio Guerra’s father was born in Sonsonate El Salvador, the site of the indigenous uprising in 1932. His mother was born in Perquin, Morazan, the place that raised the revolution he would be born into. In the midst of war, migration moved Sergio to Canada where he would begin to recreate the image of a battered history. An artist, poet, MC, producer, film maker, business owner, youth counsellor, Sergio has arrived at his Master’s program to consolidate 15 years of experience and to contribute to the breadth of knowledge regarding Central America and the Diaspora Experience.
Lizz Hodgson
Film
Lizz Hodgson is a graduate and current Masters (2018) student of the York University’s Film & Video Production Program (2011) where she specialized in documentary filmmaking. Two of her thesis projects Welcome to Holland and The Nature of Creativity screened at York Universities prestigious Cinesiege Awards. Lizz’s fiction credits include Us, Regardless, which had its Canadian premiere at the 2014 ReelWorld Film Festival in Toronto, followed by an international premiere at the Mumbai Queer International Film Festival in May 2014. Lizz has also just completed principal photography on her BravoFact funded film Eligible.
Alison Humphrey
Cinema and Media Studies
Alison Humphrey plays with stories across the fields of drama, digital media, and education. After starting out as an intern at Marvel Comics, she produced one of the first-ever online alternate reality games for Douglas Adams’s Starship Titanic, initiated one of the earliest transmedia in-fiction blogs in a TV series, and co-created two interactive, live-animated theatre projects: Faster than Night (Toronto) and The Augmentalist (Silicon Valley). Her Vanier-CGS-funded research explores how a science-fiction transmedia story world (shadowpox.org), co-created with youth on four continents, can empower civic engagement and public health problem-solving. Website: www.alisonhumphrey.com.
Hillary Kaplan
Performance Studies
Hillary Kaplan is pursuing an MA in Performance Studies, along with an MBA specializing in Arts, Media, and Entertainment Management at York University. Her research situates internet as memes as performance epistemology, and explores modes of embodiment and affect in participatory digital cultural. She has worked with arts and cultural organizations such as the Vancouver Fringe Festival, the Richmond Museum, the Queer Arts Festival, Urban Ink, and the Vancouver School of Theology. She served a term as President of the board of CJSF90.1FM, and spent several years co-producing Burn in the Forest, Vancouver’s regional Burning Man festival.
Zhouyang Lu
Digital Media (2021)
Zhouyang Lu is a designer and digital media artist. He is currently a master's student in digital media. After he received a B.A. in Digital Media at York University, he has commenced graduate studies focusing on the intersection of Design, interactive technologies and Data visualization. He is currently working through a data visualization and artwork of COVID-19, exploring intersections of visual and print media, and formats of interactive installations.
Signy Lynch
Theatre & Performance Studies
Signy Lynch holds a doctorate in Theatre and Performance Studies from York. Her research interests include political performance, diversity in theatre, spectatorship, affect, and theatre criticism. Her SSHRC-funded dissertation investigates how direct audience address in contemporary performance in Canada can help audience members and performers to negotiate the complexities of twenty-first century life. She has published work in Canadian Theatre Review, alt.theatre, and CdnTimes and is a member of the board of directors of Cahoots Theatre.
Lubna Marium
Theatre & Performance Studies
Marium, Lubna, is a dancer/researcher/writer. She has traveled from her early training in an avant-garde style of dance to later train in Manipuri. She has also taken up the study of Aesthetics and dramaturgy in Sanskrit. She has been promoting music and cultural practices of Southasia, folk and urban, through ‘Shadhona’. Lubna has produced and directed major dance productions. Recently, she has started a Feminist Dance Project. She is, also, engaged in translation of a major medieval Buddhist Vajrayana text of Bengal from Sanskrit to Bangla. Lubna is engaged in preserving several performative folk practices, designated as intangible cultural heritage.
Nicole Richardson
Film and Media Studies
Nicole Richardson completed her MA in the Film and Media Studies program. Her research is focused broadly on political podcasting communities with particular interest in the affective components of the medium and the atomized, embodied nature of its consumption. In addition to this, she is particularly interested in the political role of new media alongside emergent neoliberal and semio-capitalist structures of power.
Dan Tapper
Visual Art (2020)
Dan Tapper explores the sonic and visual properties of the unheard and invisible. From revealing electromagnetic sounds produced by the earth’s ionosphere, to exploring hidden micro worlds and creating imaginary nebulas made from code. His explorations use scientific methods alongside thought experiments resulting in rich sonic and visual worlds.
Michael Trommer
Cinema and Media Arts
Michael Trommer is a Toronto-based sound and video artist; his experimental work has been focused primarily on psychogeographical and acoustemological explorations via the use of VR, ambisonic and tactile sound, field recordings, as well as multi-channel installation and expanded video techniques. He has exhibited and performed his work at galleries and festivals throughout the world. In addition to teaching graduate sound design and sound art at George Brown College, Michael also teaches Think Tank at OCAD University and is currently a PhD candidate in Cinema and Media Arts at York University.
Elizabeth Tsui
Art History & Visual Culture
Liz is an emerging artist and a student based in Tkaronto/Toronto. Her artistic practice and research interests are grounded in technology, popular culture, and Asian diaspora. She is interested in taking humorous content and dissecting it to critique the cultural context that situates it as disposable culture, moving in and out of social media, emulating fads. Her artwork often recreates memes: currently in the form of 3D print, ultimately casting the object in bronze and her writing is often of artists who negotiate with their multicultural identities.
Melanie Wilmink
Art History
Melanie Wilmink holds a doctorate in Visual Art and Art History from York University (Toronto), with honours such as the 2014 Elia Scholars Award and a 2015 SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship. With a dissertation focus on the inter-connectivity between spectatorial experience and exhibition spaces, her ongoing research emerged during her role programming for the Calgary Society of Independent Filmmakers, and her independent curating practice including the Situated Cinema project (Pleasure Dome, 2015), and as Curator in Residence for Sidewalk Labs Toronto. She is also co-editor of the anthology Sculpting Cinema (2018). www.melaniewilmink.com
For information about Postdoctoral opportunities at Sensorium: Centre for Digital Art and Technology, please contact Director Laura Levin.
Alex de las Heras
Dr. Alex de las Heras is a Scholar and a Relational Artist who specializes in Experiential Foresight Narratives, Research-Creation Practices, and Visual Performance. He holds a Phd in Human and Social Sciences, with Meritorious Distinction (Cum Laude) from the National University of Colombia. Prior to this he studied Art and Experimental Design at the University of Art and Industrial Design Linz (Austria), and University of Basque Country, Bilbao, and communication and public relations at the Rey Juan Carlos University (Spain). His diverse educational background, combined with his radical transdisciplinary approach— spanning art, speculative design, performance, gaming, history, festivities, conflict studies, vision technologies—has enriched his research and allowed him to approach complex issues with depth and nuance. Currently, Dr. de las Heras’s research explores the concept of a 'techno-social collective' to promote a healthy and just society in the context of Colombia's post-conflict future. To date, he has completed 40 artistic works, ranging from video and photo installations, to immersive performances, to film screenings, to public space interventions. They include both individual and collaborative projects and also curation/producing of collective exhibitions. His work has been shown internationally in many venues such as in Colombia, Austria, Spain, France, Mexico, and Germany. He is co-founder and producer of major international artistic collectives, – from ‘gula gula,’ a group whose practices focus on gastro-artistic synesthesia to ‘Expanderrr Collective,’ a group activating disused public spaces through art creation. Further, Dr. de las Heras has been Principal Investigator, co-investigator, and co-producer of numerous research-creation projects. Learn more at www.alexdelasheras.es
Julia Polyck-O’Neill
Julia Polyck-O’Neill is an artist, curator, critic, poet, and writer. A former lecturer at the Obama Institute at Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz (2017-18), international fellow of the Electronic Literature Organization, and fellow of the Editing Modernism in Canada project, she is a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Postdoctoral Fellow in the department of Visual Art and Art History and the Sensorium Centre for Digital Arts and Technology at York University where she studies digital, feminist approaches to interdisciplinary artists’ archives for her project, Potential Archives: Envisioning the Future of the Interdisciplinary Artist Archive in Canada. She is currently developing a monograph based on her SSHRC-supported dissertation, Rematerializing the Immaterial: A Comparative Study of Vancouver’s Conceptual Visual Arts and Writing, which she completed at Brock University. Her writing has been published in Zeitschrift für Ästhetik und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft (The Journal for Aesthetics and General Art History), English Studies in Canada, DeGruyter Open Cultural Studies, BC Studies, Canadian Literature, Avant Canada: Poets, Prophets, Revolutionaries (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2019), and other places.
Sunita Nigam
Sunita Nigam is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow in Theatre & Performance Studies at York University, where her research focuses on the performance and politics of housing in rural and urban environments in Canada. In particular, she uses community-engaged research to explore different spatial practices citizens are innovating in response to growing housing crises. As she is learning more about sharing knowledge through storytelling as a consultant for a podcast production company, Sunita is interested in experimenting with the podcast as an accessible and evocative medium for disseminating her research.
Sunita holds a PhD in English from McGill University, where she published on the history and politics of popular performance forms in Montreal and researched the relationship between cultural performances and urban development in North American cities (specifically, Mexico City, New York, and Montreal) from 1968 to the present. Ever-on the move, Sunita currently lives and works in North Hatley, Quebec.
Devon Healey
Devon Healey works in the area of critical disability studies, theatre and drama as well as in education. All of her work is grounded in her experience as a blind woman guided by a desire to, as Paul Gilroy (2000) says, “re-educate the sensorium.” She holds a two year SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellowship with York University’s School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design as well as the Sensorium Lab. Devon is a classically trained actor and holds a PhD in Disability Studies from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. The aim of her work is to show how blindness specifically and disability more broadly can be understood as offering an alternate form of perception and thus, is a valuable and creative way of experiencing and knowing the world. Making use of theatre and drama studies together with critical disability studies and phenomenology, Devon engages an exploration of how, as Rod Michalko (2011) puts it, “we have come to say what we say and do what we do in relation to blindness and disability.” She is currently working on developing her PhD dissertation titled, “Blindness in V Acts: Disability Studies as Critical Creative Inquiry” into both a play and a book. Devon’s publications include,“Eyeing the pedagogy of trouble: The Cultural documentation of the problem subject,” The Canadian Journal of Disability studies, as well as a paper co-written with Drs. Tanya Titchkosky and Rod Michalko titled, “Understanding blindness simulation and the culture of sight,” the international Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies, Hope University, Liverpool, UK.
Ryan Conrad
Ryan Conrad is a SSHRC postdoctoral fellow in Cinema & Media Studies at York where he is currently working on a book entitled Radical VIHsion: Canadian AIDS Film & Video. Conrad is affiliated with the Archive/Counter-Archive project through his participation on the HIV/AIDS activist video case study. He completed his PhD in the Interdisciplinary Humanities program offered through the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture at Concordia University, where he has also been a part-time faculty member in the Interdisciplinary Sexuality Studies, Film Studies, and Studio Art programs. He also holds an MFA from Maine College of Art and is an active film and video maker.
Julia Chan
Julia Chan is a Mitacs Postdoctoral Fellow in Cinema and Media Arts at York University, whose research project centres around accessibility, visual and surveillance cultures, and Canadian publishing. As part of the project, Julia will be managing the journal PUBLIC: Art | Culture | Ideas and working to increase its accessibility. Julia’s other research areas of interest include image-based sexual abuse, visual culture, surveillance studies, culture and technology, “screen life” films, critical race theory, feminisms, and sexual violence in culture. Her academic article “Violence or Pleasure? Surveillance and the (Non-)Consensual Upskirt” appeared in the journal Porn Studies, and a book chapter is forthcoming in the collection Screening #MeToo: Rape Culture in Hollywood (SUNY Press) edited by Lisa Funnell and Ralph Beliveau. Julia holds a doctorate in Cultural Studies from Queen’s University and an MFA in Screenwriting from York University. Her film work has screened at festivals such as Sundance and ImagiNATIVE, and her fiction has been published in subTerrain, Joyland, LitroNY, and Cosmonauts Avenue, among other literary journals.
Leah Decter
Leah Decter is a white settler scholar and inter-media artist whose research focuses on the ways cultural production can be mobilized to advance critical (re)conciliation and decolonial change. She is currently a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow in Theatre and Performance Studies/Sensorium at York University where she is researching artists in Canada, Australia and other settler states, whose work subverts colonial ideations that are embedded in the settler imaginary. In addition to this digital archive/book project, she is currently co-editing a special issue of PUBLIC Journal forthcoming in 2021. Decter holds a PhD in Cultural Studies from Queen’s University and an MFA in New Media from Transart Institute/Danube University. Her writing has been published across disciplines and her solo, collaborative and social practice artwork has been presented internationally. Her current research-creation projects examine social-spatial politics consequent to ongoing settler colonial formation in Canada, and consider ethical approaches to being-in-relation in Indigenous sovereignty. For further info see leahdecter.com
Alana Gerecke
Alana Gerecke is a settler dance artist and scholar who pursuing academic and artistic research that coheres around embodied assembly. Gerecke holds a Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of Theatre where she researches social choreographies of assembly as they are expressed in flashmobs, community-dance projects, and publicly sited dance-based work. Her research—including her current book project Moving Publics—explores the social and spatial lives of subtle and virtuosic choreographies in public spaces. Current publications include a co-edited issue of Canadian Theatre Review (2018), a forthcoming co-edited issue of Performance Matters (2019), and a commissioned article in Susan Manning, Janice Ross, and Rebecca Schneider’s anthology Futures of Dance Studies (Wisconsin UP, 2019). A professional dance artist, Gerecke has performed with various companies and artists, including EDAM Dance, Battery Opera, Projet In Situ (France), Justine A. Chambers, and others. She is also co-founder of the interdisciplinary site-based performance group, Behind Open Doors Arts Collective (2004-2013), and she continues to facilitate and create community-based movement projects. For more, see www.alanagerecke.com.
Zoë Heyn-Jones
Zoë Heyn-Jones is a researcher-artist and cultural worker who grew up on Saugeen Ojibway land in Ontario (Canada) and on Tz’utujil/Kaqchikel Maya land in Guatemala. Zoë holds a PhD in Visual Arts from York University and a graduate diploma in Latin American and Caribbean Studies from CERLAC (the Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean, York University) where she researched the performance of human rights accompaniment and networks of solidarity activism between Guatemala and Canada. Zoë is currently a postdoctoral fellow with the Canadian Consortium on Performance and Politics in the Americas, where she has initiated the “Resisting Extractivism, Performing Opposition” project that considers performances of (anti)extractivism. She lives and works in Mexico City and Toronto. http://zoeheynjones.com/
Shawn Newman
Shawn is a Mitacs Postdoctoral Fellow in Cinema and Media Arts at York University where his research focuses on developing an accessible digital portal for Public: Art | Culture | Ideas, an interdisciplinary journal/magazine hybrid about visual cultures. He is interested in disrupting prevailing publishing practices that reify ableist norms and re-designing Public’s digital footprint. As Managing Editor of Public, and Director of Public Access (Public’s parent organization), Shawn oversees all aspects of the journal’s production as well as two other segments of the organization: Public Books and Public Projects. Having had an international career as a concert dancer and choreographer, Shawn has worked throughout Canada, across Europe, and produced his first show in Shanghai, China when he was 24. He teaches in the fields of Gender Studies, Cultural Studies, and Cinema and Media Studies with a focus on identity, power, and embodiment. He holds a PhD in Cultural Studies from Queen’s University.
May Chew
May Chew received her Doctorate in Cultural Studies from Queen’s, where her research examined the uses of interactive and immersive technologies in diverse museological sites across the country, and how these facilitate the material practice of nation and cultural citizenship. She currently holds a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Urban Public Space at York, where her work centres on the roles of public art and community engagement in urban revitalization. She collaborates on Houses on Pengarth, a large-scale research creation project centred on developing a socially-engaged, experimental art lab in Toronto’s Lawrence Heights community. May has taught in the areas of culture and technology, multiculturalism and Canadian cinema. Her work appears in the recent anthology, Material Cultures in Canada (2015). She holds an MA in Communication and Culture (York and Ryerson), and a BFA in Film Production (York).
Mitchell Akiyama
Mitchell Akiyama is a Toronto-based artist, scholar, and composer. His eclectic body of work includes objects and installations that trouble received ideas about perception and sensory experience; writings about contemporary art, animals, and cities; and scores for film and dance. Akiyama’s output has appeared in commensurately miscellaneous sources such as Leonardo Music Journal, ISEA, Sonar Music Festival (Barcelona), Raster-Noton Records (Berlin), Gendai Gallery (Toronto), and in many other exhibitions, publications, and festivals. He holds a PhD in communications from McGill University and an MFA from Concordia University. Personal Website
Mary Elizabeth Luka
Mary Elizabeth Luka was a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow at York, based at Sensorium in the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, and at the Schulich School of Business. Her creative work and research investigates how artistic, civic and business sectors are networked in the digital age, including her current comparison of sites of cultural collaboration in Canada, the U.S.A, the U.K. and Australia, and ongoing research about recent Canadian media and broadcast policy, such as the Let’s Talk TV campaign at the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission. She aims to improve understanding about how creative workers shape their careers and lives, how employers cultivate inspiring work environments, and how governments and universities generate civic and innovative commitments in the digital era. Dr. Luka is current Board Chair for Arts Nova Scotia, and a member of the NSCAD University Board of Governors and the Cultural Human Resources Council PATAC. She is a member of the public art group, Narratives in Space + Time Society, which intervenes at specific sites to engage others in art practices and storytelling, and is an award-winning digital media and television producer-director. Personal Website
Qi Wang
Qi Wang is a Chinese researcher in the area of documentary. The focus of his work is on the comparison of Chinese and western documentaries, particularly in the new media era. He is also concerned about the impacts of the new technologies on the development of documentary, such as human-computer interaction, virtual reality and augmented reality. Qi Wang is also a director. He had a career in a TV station for several years before he turned to a full-time scholar. Now he is planning for his independent interactive documentary works. He is the member of the Documentary Academic Committee of the China Television Artists Association. He holds a PhD in film from Peking University and an MA in journalism from Communication University of China.
Dr. Schem Rogerson Bader
Dr. Bader is a Mitacs Postdoctoral Fellow with York University, Archive-Counter Archive, and The ArQuives: Canada’s Queer Archive. With a PhD in Communication and Culture from the Joint Graduate Program at York/Ryerson Universities and an MFA from The School of Visual Arts in New York, Schem embraces interdisciplinarity and intersections of theory and practice. Focusing on queer history, their research examines historical violence and persistence. The recent co-authored publication with Paul Long, Media Studies: Texts, Production will be launched by Routledge, Fall 2021. Other articles include, “I, Mabel Hampton: Political Power and The Archive” (PUBLIC, 2018) and “The Idiosyncratic Archive: Queerness, Duration and Photography” (Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender, and Culture, 2018). Recently, Schem received the SSHRC Connections Grant (2021) for Indexing Resistance: The Blood & Guts of Queer Protest to coincide with Toronto Pride, June 2022. This conference brings together queer archives, archivists, artists and activists to unpack the complexities of queer resistance.
Dr. Roberta Buiani
Roberta Buiani (PhD Communication and Culture, YorkU) is an interdisciplinary artist and scholar based in Toronto. She is the co-founder of the ArtSci Salon at the Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences (Toronto) and co-organizer of LASER Toronto. Her recent SSHRC-funded research creation project draws on feminist technoscience and on collaborative encounters across the sciences and the arts to investigate emerging life forms exceeding the categories defined by traditional methods of classification. Her artistic work has travelled to art festivals (Transmediale; Hemispheric Institute Encuentro; Brazil), community centres and galleries (the Free Gallery Toronto; Immigrant Movement International, Queens, Myseum of Toronto), and science institutions (RPI; the Fields Institute). Her writing has appeared on TOPIA, Space and Culture, Cultural Studies, The Canadian Journal of Communication among others. With the ArtSci Salon she has launched a series of curatorial experiments, by occupying and re-populating abandoned spaces and cabinets across university campuses with arts installations. She is a former fellow of the Fields Institute and a research associate at the Centre for Feminist Research at York University. ArtSci Salon website: https://artscisalon.com Personal http://atomarborea.net
Dr. Julia Gray
Julia Gray, PhD, is a playwright and theatre director, as well as a performance and cultural studies scholar and critical social scientist; her award-winning work spans the arts, humanities, and social and health sciences to elucidate social experiences and overturn ablest cultural assumptions of aging and disability. She also works to theorize arts and critical qualitative methodologies, and she has published and presented across disciplines. In addition to being a Visiting Scholar with Sensorium, she is also an Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream at the University of Toronto Scarborough, in the Department of Health & Society, and an Academic Fellow at the Centre for Critical Qualitative Health Research at the University of Toronto. You can find more information at www.thejuliagray.ca
Dr. Alessandro Simari
Dr. Alessandro Simari is a Toronto-based scholar whose research focuses on the cultural politics and political economy of theatre through the lens of theatre history and contemporary (Shakespeare) performance. His most recent project was on the inter/cultural and theatrical politics of performance in ‘reconstructed’ early modern theatres. Recent publications include a co-edited special issue of Shakespeare Bulletin on ‘Labor in Contemporary Shakespeare Performance’ and the forthcoming ‘Marxist Keywords for Performance’ for JDTC and GPS, co-written as a member of the Performance & Political Economy Research Collective. He is currently undertaking research for a book-length project on cultural histories of theatrical distraction, including examining labour politics in the production and reception of VR theatre. His prospective research into the labour politics of VR theatre claims ‘distraction’ as a materially-determined and sensuously-grounded conceptual framework for the reading of ‘digital theatre’—a critical intervention reasserting worker subjectivity and industrial processes in performance theorisation and interpretation against prevailing spectator-centric discourses which frame digitally-augmented theatrical forms as provoking an embodied sense of ‘immersion’ or a hyper-attentive ‘flow’ state.
Esra Ince Ozer
Esra Ince Ozer is a PhD student in the Department of Social Sciences at Ankara University. Her research interests include gender equality, human right and media, disability studies, social media and freedom of speech, animal rights, disadvantaged groups and media, and communication strategies.
Nagma Sahi Ansari, SHASTRI Research Student Fellowship, 2017
Nagma is PhD student from the AJK Mass Communication Centre at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi, with whom Cinema and Media Arts/AMPD have enjoyed a partnership for more then 25 years. Nagma’s research project examines the presentation and of self through memory and performance using “selfies” and other representations on networked and social media. Her work seeks to better understand how these images of self, which circulate instantaneously across a number of platforms, are received and understood by multiple audiences in local and global contexts.
Dr. Hart Cohen, Visiting Scholar, 2016
Dr. Hart Cohen is Associate Professor in Media Arts in the School of Humanities and Communication Arts and a member of the Institute for Cultural and Society and the Digital Humanities Research Centre at Western Sydney University, Australia. Dr. Cohen has led three Australian Research Council Projects related to the Strehlow Collection held at the Strehlow Research Centre in Alice Springs. Two documentary films commissioned by Public Television in Australia have been made in relation to these projects: Mr. Strehlow’s Films (SBSI 2001) and Cantata Journey (ABC TV 2006) with a third film recently completed titled, Ntaria Heroes. Hart has joined the research team on the SSHRC project, Patterns that Connect: Re-curating Edmund Carpenter’s Anthropology Media Studies. Hart Cohen is co-author of Screen Media Arts: An Introduction to Concepts and Practices for Oxford University Press (2009) and is editor of the Global Media Journal/Australian Edition: 2007-present. He has a sole-authored book placed with Talyor and Francis titled, The Strehlow Archive: Explorations in old and new media due out in 2017.
Lizzy Pournara, Visiting Scholar, 2016
Lizzy Pournara is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of American Literature and Culture, School of English, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. She also holds a BA in English Literature and Language (2011) and an MA in English Literature (2013). Her research interests focus on contemporary American poetry, multimodality, artists’ books, digital literature, book-making and creative writing. Her Ph.D. thesis revolves around the aspect of multimodality in contemporary poetic practice and investigates the impact of inscription technologies on creative writing practices and formation of reading habits.
Cristian Villavicencio, Visiting Scholar, 2015
Cristian Villavicencio (b.1984, Quito-Ecuador) Lives and works in Bilbao, Spain. Artist and Researcher, is currently carrying out his Ph.D. project titled The materiality of the moving image, at the University of the Basque Country supported by a Ph.D.grant from the Department of Education, Universities and Research, Basque Government. His artwork has been exhibited in museums of the Basque Country, Spain like Centro Cultural Montehermoso Kulturunea (2013), Guggenheim Bilbao Museum (2013) and internationally in Ars Electronica Festival (2014) in Linz – Austria, and BIM (Moving Image Biennale, 2013) in Buenos Aires – Argentina. In 2015 Cristian has been granted the “Artist in Gallery Award” at Premio Arte Laguna in Venice Italy and the second Prize at Ertibil Bizkaia, Spain (Young Artist Award). He had a three months visiting research period at Interface Cultures Department at Linz – Austria (2014) and an artist in residency period at MA Studio in Beijing China (2012).
William Urrichio, Visiting Scholar, 2014
William Uricchio is Professor of Comparative Media Studies and Principal Investigator of the MIT Open Documentary Lab and the MIT Game Lab. He is also Professor of Comparative Media History at Utrecht University and a fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study (Lichtenberg-Kolleg) at Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. He has been awarded Humboldt, Guggenheim and Fulbright fellowships, and most recently, the Berlin Prize. His research interests include revisiting the histories of old media when they were new; algorithmic enablements of participatory cultural forms; the history and future of television; cultural identities and the question of “Americanization” in the 20th and 21st centuries. His publications include Reframing Culture (1993); We Europeans? Media, Representations, Identities (Chicago/Intellect, 2008); Media Cultures (Heidelberg, 2006). He is currently completing books on the deep history of television; on history-based games; the playing of history and historiography after post-structuralism; and editing a collection of essays for the British Film Institute entitled Many More Lives of the Batman.
Executive Committee
- Robert Allison, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
- Mary Bunch, Canada Research Chair, Department of Cinema Media Arts
- Ian Garrett, Associate Professor, Theatre
- Laura Levin, Director, Sensorium
- Jenifer Papararo, Director/Curator, Art Gallery of York University
- Jamie Robinson, Assistant Professor, Theatre
- Jane Tingley, Associate Professor, Computational Arts
- Brandon Vickerd, Professor, Visual Art Art History
External Advisory Board
- Philip Beesley, School of Architecture, University of Waterloo (Kitchener/Waterloo)
- Amahl Hazelton, Head of Communications, (Destinations), Moment Factory (Montreal)
- Michael Jemtrud, Director, Facility for Architectural Research in Media and Mediation, McGill University (Montreal)
- Alan Macy, Research and Development Director, past President and Founder of BIOPAC Systems, Inc. (Montreal)
- Isabelle Rousset, Educational Coordinator, Derivative, Touch Designer Software (Toronto)
Featured News & Events
Space
The Sensorium Research Loft and the Sensorium Flex Space are open for limited access booking. For additional information and scheduling please email: helen2@yorku.ca
The Sensorium Research Loft is a co-working and research space promoting the interdisciplinary study of media arts, performance, and digital culture. Located on the 4th floor of the Goldfarb Centre for Fine Art at York University, it supports lively exchanges across artistic fields, socially engaged co-creation, and shared critical reflection.
The Sensorium Research Loft is currently open for limited-access booking. Questions about the Research Loft can be directed to helen2@yorku.ca.
The Sensorium Flex Space is located in Room 326 of the Joan and Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts (CFA). The space is equipped with a green screen, projectors, recording equipment, and more. It is currently open for limited access bookings by Sensorium Affiliate Members.
Questions about bookings can be directed to helen2@yorku.ca.
Photos from a recent collaborative research-creation residency. Shadow Horizons gathered three artists in the Sensorium Flex Space: Erik Ruin (paper-cuts, shadow and video projections, Philadelphia), Jessica Moss (violin/composition, Montreal) and Gabriel Levine (clarinets/performance, Toronto) to explore themes and histories of diaspora, labour and collective imagination.
Need More Information?
If you have any questions or need further information, please don't hesitate to connect with us. Our team is here to help! You can also schedule a visit to see AMPD in person.