Program
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Hito Steyerl. Eye Explosion
Lecture performance
In the film Eye-Machine, Harun Farocki wrote about suicide cameras, devices that are fitted into missiles, home in on the target, collide with it and continue to broadcast images after the explosion. In Steyerl’s eyes, these cameras have mushroomed across the millions of lenses installed in mobile phones - zombie cameras, multiplied and incorporated into the owners’ movements and emotions. A series of trips made by the artist to Kobanî and Suruç, the scenes of the bloodiest battles between ISIS and Kurdish rebels, prompt an exploration into these new visible images, produced and interpreted by autonomous machines. What is this new reality that remains unperceived by the human eye, and what are the designs of the State that promotes it?
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Kassem Mosse. Combat Zones that See
Sound performance
The intervention by DJ and sound artist Kassem Mosse approaches the sounds of war from an unexpected viewpoint. The performance reproduces military noise from the data analysis of patterns deployed in war, melding them with sounds from everyday and obsolete music technology. Mosse unfurls an acoustic soundscape that mixes industrialised combat sounds with soldiers’ consumer devices: the crack of gunfire with the hum of hard drives, tweets from mobile phones or Skype conversations with intermittent flashes from bullets fired.








![Miguel Brieva, ilustración de la novela infantil Manuela y los Cakirukos (Reservoir Books, 2022) [izquierda] y Cibeles no conduzcas, 2023 [derecha]. Cortesía del artista](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ecologias_del_deseo_utopico.jpg.webp)
![Ángel Alonso, Charbon [Carbón], 1964. Museo Reina Sofía](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/perspectivas_ecoambientales.jpg.webp)




