Olga Goriunova

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Born Ulan-Ude, Soviet Union (today Russia)
Lives in London, United Kingdom
Web Academia.edu, Aaaaarg

Olga Goriunova (1977, Ulan-Ude, USSR) is a cultural theorist and curator in the fields of digital media arts and cultures. She is Professor in the Department of Media Arts, Royal Holloway, University of London.

She graduated in philology from the Moscow State University (1999). She completed her Ph.D. on "Art Platforms. The constitution of cultural and artistic currents on the Internet" in Media Lab, University of Art and Design Helsinki, on the concept of art platforms - forms of autonomous artistic and cultural self-organisation core to the 1990s' and early 2000s' Internet culture. She proposed the notion of organisational aesthetics to conceptualise artistic development of alternative infrastructures and communicative spaces as artwork and form of aesthetics in its own right. Her examples include software art, 8-bit music and amateur literature. Goriunova's doctoral thesis was published as Art Platforms. Cultural Production on the Internet (Routledge, 2012).

She taught audiovisual arts, sociology of art and media theory in Moscow City University and Moscow State University for the Humanities and delivered lecture series in art institutions in post-Soviet space, such as Pro Arte Institute, St. Petersburg/Russia (on media theory and philosophy of technology, "Media: history of expansion", 2000-2001), Centres for Contemporary Art in Almaty/Kazakhstan and Chisinau/Moldova (2001, 2006) and media art and theory conferences world-wide, before moving to Britain in 2008.

In 2001 she curated and moderated the round table discussion Copyright in the Age of Digital Reproduction, MediaForum, Moscow. She is a co-organizer of Readme software art festivals (Moscow 2002, Helsinki 2003, Aarhus 2004, Dortmund 2005); a co-organizer of software art repository Runme.org. From 2001 a member of Data Exchange Laboratory. In 2010, Goriunova organized an international exhibition Funware that was first shown in Arnolfini gallery in Bristol and which then traveled to the cultural organisations MU and Baltan, in Eindhoven in The Netherlands (November 2010 – January 2011).

She written and published on a broad range of topics in the areas of new media theory and art, literature in the digital age, history of philosophy of technology, aesthetics, social and critical theory, emphasizing questions at the intersection of digital materiality, aesthetics and organisation. Research interests include digital folklore, aesthetics of glitch, FLOSS (free, libre and open source software) and culture, online participatory platforms, 8-bit music and low tech aesthetics, sociology of artistic experiment and "male" literature, amongst others.

She lives in London.

Publications

Books
Books edited
Book chapters
Selected papers and essays

Interviews

Links