Artistic Research and Spatial Pedagogies in an era of Large Language models
๐๏ธ Wednesday, 24 June โ 3:50pm
- 4:30pm
(40 mins)
Presenters
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Abstract
This presentation expands on artistic research processes motivated by archipelagic thinking, and structured by three core concepts: Mapping, Sensing and Hacking. Together, these concepts provide an entangled approach to artistic research, where the cognitive mapping of traditional, textual histories and memories are balanced by the spatial, sensorial character of localities and communities, with the ambition to innovate and hack technical systems of recording to provide novel, artistic modes of representation and exchange. Reflecting this dynamic, the presentation will show how an artistic research process What is an Island? (2018-2020) led to a novel pedagogical programme MA Art and Environment (2020-2026) that aimed to cultivate the exploration of spatial intelligence, embodied knowledge and world-making methodologies in an era of artificial intelligence and large language models. As Stanford AI Researcher Fei-Fei Liโ has recently argued, spatial intelligence is โfoundational to our imagination and creativityโ and instrumental โfor interactive experiences in real or virtual worldsโ (2025). Beyond the limits of large language models, archipelagic spatial intelligence and relational pedagogies are uniquely organic characteristics that valorise experience over representation (Ayolov, 2026). Developed in partnership with the Sherkin Island Development Society (SIDS) and the West Cork Arts Centre (Uillinn) the BA in Visual Art and MA Art and Environment are the only formal art degree programmes delivered entirely on off-shore islands in Europe. To think artistic research through the lens of archipelagic thinking is to consider how the complex assemblage of artistic research disciplines and spatial-relational pedagogies can support the uniquely opaque character of artistic research at a time of increasing pressure for instrumentalization, digitalisation and quantification.
Biography
Glenn Loughran is an artist, educator and researcher at the School of Art and Design, TU Dublin. Currently, he is an artist-rese on the Technologies of Peace project at the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA / 2026 -27). Since 2006 he has been a member of the Working Group on Artistic Research at the European League of Institutes of the Arts (ELIA). He has exhibited internationally at the Cooper Gallery, Dundee, Helsinki Research Pavilion Venice Biennale, Medialab Prado, Madrid, the Dakar Biennale, Dakar, the Lithuania Biennale, Kaunas, presented widely at the Creative Time Summit, Venice Biennale, Centre Pompidou Paris, ELIA Biennale and published books and chapters with Columbia University, Bloomsbury and Sternberg Presses.