
News/Events
News/Events
Explore Creative Technologies and the broader Arts Division by attending an event!
Creative Interventions: A Colloquium in Arts, Design, and Media
CREATIVE INTERVENTIONS is a community colloquium in contemporary creativity and creative practices.
Our speaker series raises questions of import to contemporary creative workers in media and technology. How do creative workers address their most challenging problems? How does creative labor intersect with other forms of labor to nurture the world views and cultural practices of our democracy?
Creative Interventions addresses the interconnected work of artists, designers, activists, and knowledge workers—and the intrinsic and transformative capacity of that work to cultivate a just society.
We invite members of the UCSC community to attend these talks. Please RSVP using the link(s) below.
Spring 2025 Colloquium Speakers
April 15, 2025
11:40a – 1:15p
May 6, 2025
11:40a – 1:15p

May 20, 2025
11:40a – 1:15p

Sofia Crespo & Feileacan Kirkbride McCormick
Entanglements: Exploring Artificial Biodiversity
In this talk, Feileacan McCormick and Sofia Crespo will share the journey that led them to create their combined studio practice Entangled Others, as well as the questions that guided their artistic research throughout the past 7 years since they began working with AI.
Nora Khan
Discernment: Generative Images, Synthetic Media and Evolving Critical Impulse
What can criticism offer us in a world of unruly generative images and synthetic media? What precise language might we use for machine learning’s impact, or the wake of an algorithm? How must our practices of discernment and the critical impulse evolve in response to computational developments, to perhaps be more resilient and responsive?
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This talk invites one to consider how our language might move with ‘intelligent’ systems and beings that simulate liveness and likeness. To navigate a present and future dominated by synthetic media, and created by predictive systems, we take up a practice of seeing through systems. This talk first explores the craft of developing a hybrid, strategic, collective and dissident criticism of technology. It second reviews cases of baffling, seemingly inarticulable experiences from early software experiments and artists’ interventions, into AI/ML. Third, it explores the evolution of language in response to material and symbolic systems that dramatically shape our creative approaches and cognition. Throughout, the talk explores evolving critical methods that help us better situate ourselves to identify a vast range of hidden fictions and beliefs about what technology is meant to do and be.
Past Colloquium Speakers
Oct. 22, 2024
11:40a – 1:15p
Nov. 5, 2024
11:40a – 1:15p
Nov. 19, 2024
11:40a – 1:15p



What is Indigenous Narrative Structure?
Event Description
What are the rhetorics of Indigeneity, Indigenous practices, and Indigenous activism in the digital sphere? What relationships can be found between under comprehension of Indigeneity, and our understanding of technological and media systems? What is Cherokee syllabary, and how did it come to be integrated successfully into our digital platforms?
Joseph Erb will discuss his widely varied work toward just representation and inclusion of Cherokee written syllabary and language in digital contexts, including his own activism and scholarship, with Joanna Hearne, Mark Palmer with Durbin Feeling (see “Origin Stories in the Genealogy of Cherokee Language Technology”).
Systems and Symptoms: Designing for the Meaning Crisis
Event Description
Humanity’s ability to create and circulate commonly held narratives and collectively exist in the symbolic world, as well as the material world, has brought us to fascinating, dizzying, and dangerous heights over the course of our existence. We find ourselves in a period when the stories and institutions from which we derive meaning appear to be demonstrating a concerning degree of fragility and producing dismal side effects. Exemplified in trends like the Americans movement from organized religion and the erosion of trust in liberal, democratic institutions, the time for designing new, more resilient systems of meaning is now. With the tools of emerging digital technology at our disposal, how are people collectively engaging to respond to the specific needs of the meaning crisis? From proliferation of personal development content on YouTube and TikTok, to the embrace of video conferencing platforms like Zoom for meditation and men’s groups, we will learn how different groups are feeding their need for meaning and community.
Ever Bussey is a social researcher and creative media maker. The nature of their practice brings the intricacies of human social relationships into focus through storytelling and collective world-building. Ever was introduced to digital media making through Allied Media Projects, where they learned to apply a social justice lens to their creative practice. He collaborates in the Just Tech program, which foregrounds questions of power, justice, and the public impact of new technologies, investigating evidence of bias and harms while imagining and creating more just technological futures.
Creating a Culture of Consent for Our Digital Future: A Conversation with Tawana Petty (2024)
Wilding AI: Octavia Butler, Critical Making, and Other Possible Worlds
Event Description
In this talk, I will discuss design ontologies—how tools are made and to what end. I’m particularly interested in GenAI tools and the ways they might be broken or bent toward purposes beyond traditional design frameworks. I think with and against the work of writer Octavia Butler, particularly her work on xenogenesis – becoming alien – to work through some of my recent art and critical works. I am particularly interested in what you, as student thinkers and creators, are working, thus plan for a dialogic engagement.
This talk is presented in collaboration with the UCSC Center for Racial Justice.
Jan. 14, 2025
11:40a – 1:15p

Toxic Traces: AI and Planetary Health, Past and Future
Event Description
In this talk, Wang will unpack the environmental impacts of AI in a time of climate crisis, alongside the joys and pleasures of permacomputing and degrowth. Wang will discuss their work, An Archive of Witch Fever, and connections between computing, radio and early semiconductors, reframing computation as a transformation or alchemy of materials, and computation as a racialized and gendered practice.
Creative Technologies: The 1st online undergraduate major in the UC system
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