<p>Lídia Pereira [PT] is an artist and researcher whose work focuses on the political economy of the internet, algorithmic governance and labour in and around corporate social networks. She is currently a candidate in the PhDArts programme of the Leiden University Academy of Creative and Performing Arts and the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague where she is investigating the uses of videogames as feminist tactical media.</p>
<p>Lídia Pereira [PT] is an artist and researcher whose work focuses on the political economy of the internet, algorithmic governance and labour in and around corporate social networks. She is currently a candidate in the PhDArts programme of the Leiden University Academy of Creative and Performing Arts and the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague where she is investigating the uses of videogames as feminist tactical media.</p>
<p>amy pickles is an artist and loosely formed educator. In her work, she experiments with ways to hold onto, and consider, pervasive colonial infrastructures we are a part of. In our work, redistribution - of knowledge, tools, finances - and collaboration are ways to refuse individual ownership.</p>
<p>amy pickles is an artist and loosely formed educator. In her work, she experiments with ways to hold onto, and consider, pervasive colonial infrastructures we are a part of. In our work, redistribution - of knowledge, tools, finances - and collaboration are ways to refuse individual ownership.</p>
<p>Recent collective organising includes the co-curation of ‘On Coloniality’, a pedagogical programme for a.pass, and assisting the reading group That Might be Right, both based in Brussels, BE.</p>
<p>Recent collective organising includes the co-curation of ‘On Coloniality’, a pedagogical programme for a.pass, and assisting the reading group That Might be Right, both based in Brussels, BE.</p>