Installation view © Gwangju Biennale

The 13th Gwangju Biennale, 《Minds Rising, Spirits Tuning》, explores the spectrum of the “extended mind” as both an artistic and theoretical proposition. The exhibition delves into expansive cosmologies, activating manifold forms of intelligence, Earth’s life-systems, and communal modes of survival, while confronting the looming horizons of cognitive capitalism, algorithmic violence, and planetary imperialisms.

Curated by Defne Ayas and Natasha Ginwala, the Biennale unfolds across four venues in the city of Gwangju with works by 69 participating artists (individuals and collectives). It is accompanied by an online publishing platform and bimonthly journal Minds Rising, a compilation of key feminist essays titled Stronger than Bone, and a diverse series of online public programs under the banner of Live Organ. As part of Live Organ, events such as GB Talk | Rising to the Surface: Practicing Solidarity Future, The Forum: Augmented Minds and the Incomputable, and The Procession: Through the Gate bring together artists, activists, scholars, and systems thinkers.

Ayas and Ginwala note “After working with so many artists and thinkers—through tenacity and persistence—we are grateful to present an expanded Biennale program that approaches life processes in a more inclusive way than ever before, maintaining aesthetic rigor, dignity, and historical consciousness. The prevailing conditions of sorrow, alienation, and systemic collapse strongly shaped the composition of this program.

Through new artworks and visions that dynamically articulate languages of resilience, dissent, and repair, we sought to understand the organic and machinic intelligences that arise from feminist epistemologies and struggles for racial justice, as well as the various life-forms that exist across pasts and futures. 《Minds Rising, Spirits Tuning》 assembles and mediates these spatial practices of thinking, aspiring toward socially and ecologically grounded global ethics that resist the grasp of militarism and authoritarianism that extends across the world today. Although this journey has been immensely challenging, the process itself is a privilege and an honor.”


Sangdon Kim, Fire Cart, 2017 © Sangdon Kim

The 13th Gwangju Biennale, 《Minds Rising, Spirits Tuning》, investigates the spectrum of the extended mind by challenging the structural divisions historically imposed upon corporeal, technological, and spiritual intelligence. The Biennale engages with expansive cosmologies, activates Earth’s life systems, circulates feminist knowledge, commemorates histories of trauma, and affirms collective survival strategies.

By closely observing how varied artistic practices operate across multiple forms of life, the Biennale examines how they confront the encroaching horizons of cognitive capitalism and planetary imperialisms, as well as the emergence of techno-spiritual agencies that inhabit contemporary computational ecologies and neural networks. These reflections stem from our conviction that, in this time of traumatic interregnum, the co-evolution of human and electronic intelligence must be addressed from a planetary perspective.

In Gwangju—a city that holds acute memories of resistance and communal trauma—this Biennale extends these historical lineages, engaging theoretical, material, vocal, olfactory, and psychic languages that articulate collective forms. The 40th anniversary of the May 18 Democratic Uprising becomes a catalyst for traversing thresholds between life and death, the liminal realm of the undead, and for deepening analyses of solidarity-building and global alliance-making in the present. Through these inquiries, the Biennale seeks a fuller understanding of the intrinsic relations among healing, dissent, and renewal.

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