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Autori principali: Rousi, Rebekah, Cinque, Toija, O'Sullivan, Katey, Mayer, Aska, Rosero, Esteban Guerrero, Melgin, Elina
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.21893
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author Rousi, Rebekah
Cinque, Toija
O'Sullivan, Katey
Mayer, Aska
Rosero, Esteban Guerrero
Melgin, Elina
author_facet Rousi, Rebekah
Cinque, Toija
O'Sullivan, Katey
Mayer, Aska
Rosero, Esteban Guerrero
Melgin, Elina
contents The exhibition Butterfly: Glo-cal Effects of Data, Energy, and Industry is, at its core, a meditation on entanglement-between the global and the local, the ecological and the digital, the material and the virtual. It asks how we might reframe the infrastructures that shape our lives not only as technologies of efficiency or convenience, but as ecosystems themselves: dynamic, interdependent, and in need of care. It emerges from a prior exhibition, EcoDigital Futures, presented as part of Melbourne Design Week 2024, an Australian initiative of Creative Victoria and the National Gallery of Australia. That landmark exhibition spotlighted the growing imperative to align our digital futures with ecological sensibilities. Butterfly carries forward this vision, but also intensifies it by shifting the focus from speculation to activation, from theory to lived intervention.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_21893
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Butterfly: glo-cal effects of data, energy and industry, New Media and Performance Exhibition Catalogue
Rousi, Rebekah
Cinque, Toija
O'Sullivan, Katey
Mayer, Aska
Rosero, Esteban Guerrero
Melgin, Elina
Physics and Society
Computers and Society
The exhibition Butterfly: Glo-cal Effects of Data, Energy, and Industry is, at its core, a meditation on entanglement-between the global and the local, the ecological and the digital, the material and the virtual. It asks how we might reframe the infrastructures that shape our lives not only as technologies of efficiency or convenience, but as ecosystems themselves: dynamic, interdependent, and in need of care. It emerges from a prior exhibition, EcoDigital Futures, presented as part of Melbourne Design Week 2024, an Australian initiative of Creative Victoria and the National Gallery of Australia. That landmark exhibition spotlighted the growing imperative to align our digital futures with ecological sensibilities. Butterfly carries forward this vision, but also intensifies it by shifting the focus from speculation to activation, from theory to lived intervention.
title Butterfly: glo-cal effects of data, energy and industry, New Media and Performance Exhibition Catalogue
topic Physics and Society
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.21893