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Artivism: Moveable Parts, with Lucius Von Joo
Lucius Von Joo presents “Movable Parts” and will explore what happens when the lobbies, hallways, sidewalks, factory floors and empty lots we pass through are set up to invite rather than control.
What happens when the lobbies, hallways, sidewalks, factory floors and empty lots we pass through are set up to invite rather than control? This session explores how altering the conditions and aesthetics of space can shift agency, turning ordinary places into sites of play, collaboration, and meaning-making.
The interactive talk will move through examples of community-based media projects, which people had the opportunity to author, build, and reimagine together. The focus is less on polished outcomes and more on movable parts, the unfinished elements that allow others to step in and take part.
Bio
Lucius Von Joo (Ed.D., 2024, Teachers College, Columbia University) is an educator and designer whose work centers on play, public imagination, and collaborative making as tools for learning and social reflection. Lucius has taught in the U.S. and abroad, working with learners from kindergarten to university level, with a focus on media and play. He currently serves as Associate Director of Design Education for the Digital Futures Institute at Teachers College, Columbia University, where he develops participatory exhibitions, workshop series, and site-specific installations that invite learners of all ages to build, question, and experiment together. He is also Instructor of Communication, Media, and Learning Technologies Design
Teachers College, Columbia University in the Communication, Media and Learning Technologies Design program.
His curatorial work includes MODES, Dead Tech, Puppets in Education, Sandbox, and Boundaries of Adventure Playgrounds, which have been staged in the DFI Gallery. Before his academic post, Lucius co-created The Secret Alley in San Francisco which is an immersive studio and media environment for filmmakers, performers, and many other sorts of collaboration. He also designed for 3 Minute Media, social issues media festival, and later launched Woven Media Fest, designed as a meeting ground that mixes mediums, artistic approaches, and cultural origins to produce new forms of meaning.
His research and practice are grounded in the belief that play is a right, and that people deserve accessible ways to think and communicate beyond written or verbal language. Across his projects, he works to reconfigure spaces so that participation is not an afterthought but a condition.
References:
luciusvonjoo.com
buildingplay
DFI Gallery
Woven
Register HERE.
Where: Online
Artivism: The Power of Art for Social Transformation is jointly sponsored by Adelphi University and the Gottesman Libraries. A movement with committed social artivists, Artivism: The Power of Art Social Transformation, grew out of Illuminations of Social Imagination: Learning From Maxine Greene, (Dio Press, 2019), edited by Teachers College alumni Courtney Weida and Carolina Cambronero-Varela, and Dolapo Adeniji-Neill, of Adelphi University.
To request disability-related accommodations, contact OASID at oasid@tc.edu, or 212-678-3689, (646) 755-3144 video phone, as soon as possible.