Mapping the Future of the Lab: report

Posted on Saturday January 23rd 2010 at 14:29

baltan map

The 1st of December the Social Spaces Group was invited to organize a mapping session in Eindhoven, Baltan Lab. The question was to explore the Future of the Media Lab. Different coordinators of international media labs were invited to join and discuss how the lab was changing these days, how these changes could be pushed in an interesting direction and how the collaboration between the different labs could be an added value.


Who participated?
Annet Dekker, Annette Wolfsberger
Ars Electronica Futurelab (Linz, Austria) – Horst Hörtner, Director
BALTAN Laboratories (Eindhoven, the Netherlands) – Angela Plohman, Director
Culture Lab, Newcastle University (Newcastle, UK) – Atau Tanaka, Chair of Digital Media, Acting Director Culture Lab
Constant (Brussels, Belgium) – Wendy Van Wynsberghe
FoAM (Brussels, Belgium) – Nik Gaffney
iMAL center for digital cultures and technologies (Brussel, Belgium) – Yves Bernard, Director
iShed (Bristol, UK) – Clare Reddington, Director
LABoral Art and Industrial Creation Centre (Gijon, Spain) – Benjamin Weil, Chief Curator; Lucía García, Deputy Director
Laboratorio Medial (Santiago, Chile) – Ignacio Nieto
Le Laboratoire (Paris, France) – Caroline Naphegyi, Artistic Director
Locus Sonus (Aix-en-Provence, France) – Peter Sinclair, Research Director
MAD Emergent Art Centre (Eindhoven, NL) – René Paré, Director
Medialab Prado (Madrid, Spain) – Marcos García
Medialab Utrecht (Utrecht, NL) – Levien Nordeman
The Patchingzone (Rotterdam, NL) – Anne Nigten, Director
Piksel (Bergen, Norway) – Gisle Froysland, Director
RMIT University (Adelaide, Australia) – Dr Melinda Rackham, Adjunct
Swiss artists in labs Program (Zurich, Switzerland) – Irene Hediger, Co-Director
Timelab (Ghent, Belgium) – Eva De Groote
U-centre for Art and Creativity (Dortmund, Germany) – Andreas Broeckmann, Founding Director
V2_Lab (Rotterdam, NL) – Boris Debackere, Michel van Dartel
Virtueel Platform (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) – Annet Dekker, Annette Wolfsberger
Waag Society (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) – Lucas Evers, Head of Programme
WORM (Rotterdam, NL) – Hajo Doorn, Walter Langelaar

What happens?
The main goal of the workshop is to find out what a lab is, what a lab can be and what a lab needs to function as good as possible. The Future of the Lab is explored through a mapping session that has the intention to be a social event where the different participants had a first opportunity to exchange thoughts in a playful way. It did not want to stimulate conversations about an abstract lab, but about the lab the participants would know/run.

The participants are divided in four groups. The moderators of the overall session and the groups are Liesbeth Huybrechts, Jon Stam, Thomas Laureyssens, Priscilla Machils (Media & Design Academy, Social Spaces) and Angela Plohman (Baltan Lab). The moderator explains the rules of the game and facilitates the sessions. Each group should name 1 ‘presenter’. The presenter switches tables at each session and presents the group results in the end of the workshop. The group participants stay at their table.

The map is divided in two zones: a border area where personal experiences could be mapped and a central collaborative zone that has the concrete form of the Baltan lab. Key values, people, things, infrastructural traits and key threats related to the lab are visualised via different prepared icons. We made a prefab taglist of values based on the different written descriptions the participants made of their labs, namely:
art, awareness, collaboration, consultancy, creativity, culture, dissemination, distribution, ethics, experimentation, hybridity, industry, innovation, interdisciplinary, international, meeting place, national, networked, open, production, public engagement, reflection, research, research & development, scientific, shared expertise, shared practice, society, technology, transparent

Each participant receives a series of coloured ‘expressive ‘ icons for personal feedback that contains 1 bomb-icon + 1 safety-icon + 2 thumbs. With a safety icon, in the form of lock, people can make sure that items on the map can not be removed. A bomb-card can be played when a participant doesn’t agree with a situation/item on the map. The thumbs can be played when a participant likes/dislikes a situation/item on the map.

The workshop has 3 sessions. After each session the presenter changes tables including the map of the lab, the border area stays on the table. In each session, items can be removed from or added to the map. The moderator will give instructions.The first session was 60 minutes. People start to map the different aspects (people, infrastructural elements, ..) on the map and prioritize the different items in a zone in the form of a compass. After 50 minutes the group can decide which items on the map have to be secured, because in a second session a new group will adapt the map. The second session is 30 minutes. The map moves to a next group. The members of this group start with bombing things on the map they are confronted with and than continues to work on it. The third session is 10 minutes. The map moves again.  ”Facebooklike” a group can like and dislike items on the map of an other group.

A mapping session proceeded like this…

Social Spaces Mapping workshop, Video by Baltan Laboratories from Liesbeth Huybrechts on Vimeo.

A general reflection
The mapping methodology is used visualise a process in space and time. Mapping stimulates people to engage in a participatory design process. We created a low-tech mapping system, an open and extendible set of icons allowing participants to make their thoughts explicit in a visual way in the form of a map. Whereas the semantic space created during a participatory design event is not just visual, but also linguistic, tactile and emotional, the visual aspect of the mapping was combined with a verbal notation of the conversations triggered by the icons.

This session in Eindhoven was the first time – in a series of mapping sessions we organized the past years – we used ‘strange and playful objects’ (bombs, thumbs and locks). The added value of collaborative processes is that different disciplines present different views on a subject. In a lot of the former mapping sessions, people were too eager to please each other and to search as quickly as possible for common ground. By making the ‘strange’ or the conflict part of the conversation, people are allowed to disagree, enabling them to risk a step on uncommon ground, which is more conductive to creativity. In this adapted set of icons for Baltan, some icons will disturb the process when people feel they do not agree with how things are modeled. In relation to the conversation space, a series of tactics will be developed, such as the forced usage of bombs that enable the participants to remove constallations on the map they do not entirely agree upon.

What discussions were going on in the groups?

Group 1 put fluidity, awareness and process central in the vision of their lab. They linked the role of the generalist, the broker and the producer to this vision. Face to face work and online collaborative work is an important factor to perform these roles, via brainstorming, scenario making, stories, workshops, wikis, low tech tools… All these methods and tools are used to bring the stories out of and in the lab, to interface with daily life. Non-hierarchical structures are connected to open and transparant methodologies to stimulate bottom-up work. Technology should be light and inexpensive, so it can be taken out and in of the lab quite quickly. Awareness of history, a living archive and experiments with that history should be present and are preconditions to flexible access  to knowledge. Trust is the glue in this lab. Money was an issue, just like it was for all the other labs: too little or too much money can have a huge impact on how things work.

Baltan Lab Future of the Lab presentation mapping 1, December 1 2009 from Liesbeth Huybrechts on Vimeo.

Group 2. While the former group put interdisciplinary work central and not art, the second group saw art production as a central issue. They did have doubts if art production should be called artistic research or R&D. In any case they wanted to provide a critical space, rather than a space filled with tools. Artefacts would be constructed in the lab and disseminated outside of the space by a mediator. The group found it difficult to decide what the role or the name of this mediator should be: a curator or a facilitator or…

Baltan Lab Future of the Lab presentation mapping 2, December 1 2009 from Liesbeth Huybrechts on Vimeo.

Group 3 builds a quite big lab where visionary, nerdy and artistic people meet. To reach the public a disseminator would do a significant amount of work. The other groups think this disseminator should be rather called a collaborator. Also, the other groups state, the lab group 3 constructed was too big and had too much specialized spaces, which made the lab inflexible. This lead the discussion to the interesting issue that the bigger a lab gets, the more difficult it becomes to organize it. Would you do everything in the lab or would you share practices over labs? Is more collaboration among the medialabs necessary? Can you spread functions internationally? The lab coordinators agreed it was possible and even good to spread functions, but they also stated it is difficult for labs to invest in working on the network, since their work in the lab is already quite intense. Extra funding could maybe invested in maintaining the network.

Baltan Lab Future of the Lab presentation mapping 3, December 1 2009 from Liesbeth Huybrechts on Vimeo.

Group 4 put society, sharing, network, public engagement and awareness central in their lab. They discussed the tension between two models: 1. the division of roles and tasks (technical, curatorial, community…) in a hierarchical way, aided by a advisory board, 2. a grassroots model where the artist is developer and the other way around. This second model was preferred by the group. The artist-developer may be a person, a team or just a vision that is shared with others in many non-hierarchical ways. The goal is to convince traditionalists and to leave the idea of the audience in the traditional sense. The audience should be in the centre of the space and become participants through systems of collaboration and coproduction organized by the lab. Sharing is a core issue: knowledge, expertise, practice, tools and resources are shared in sustainable ways.

Baltan Lab Future of the Lab presentation mapping 4, December 1 2009 from Liesbeth Huybrechts on Vimeo.

The mapping session made it possible to formulate some issues to discuss further during the rest of the expert meeting.

More information about the mapping icons and method can be found on our blog Interface-Our-Space.

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5 Comments

  1. e-cultuur weblog» Weblog Archief » Report Mapping Session Future of Lab:

    [...] The 1st of December the research group  Social Spaces (Media and Design Academy and Arts & Architecture) was invited to organize a mapping session in Eindhoven, at the Baltan Lab. The question was to explore the Future of the Media Lab and was initiated by Baltan labs, Virtueel Platform (the Netherlands) and BAM (Belgium). Different coordinators of international media labs were invited to join and discuss how the lab was changing these days, how these changes could be pushed in an interesting direction and how the collaboration between the different labs could be an added value. A report can be found here [...]

  2. Doug Dellasciucca:

    Hello i am so delighted I discovered your blog, I actually discovered you by error, while I was searching Yahoo for something else, Anyways I am here now and would just like to say thanks for a great blog posting and a all round absorbing blog (I also love the theme/design), I do not have time to read it all at the right now but I have bookmarked it and also added your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read more,

  3. Liesbeth:

    great to hear you like it. We just started it some months ago and happy to have a good forum for our work and interests. Please keep contributing, commenting and adding!

  4. Mapping Session – The Future of the Lab « Baltan Laboratories:

    [...] Huybrechts and the Social Spaces research group put up an extensive report on the mapping session here. Below you will find video of the final summaries of the 4 mapping groups. View on [...]

  5. Social Spaces » Blog Archive » Mapping the Euregional fablab: a report:

    [...] already described in previous posts, MAPit is a mapping toolkit to visualise thoughts and ideas in a playful way and facilitates [...]

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