Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda
is an artist, researcher and award-winning author. She produces video installations, sculptures, digital projects, live performances, and collaborative projects that investigate the body as a site of cultural, gendered, and techno-scientific inscriptions. Her research centers on the histories of feminist art at the intersection of science and technology. She is the author of the award-winning book Women Made Visible: Feminist Art and Media in post-1968 Mexico (2019) and several publications on Latin American feminist art and archival practices. She is a member of Art/mamas, a Vancouver-based collective of artist mothers and sono(soro)ridades, a group of feminist sound artists, activists and scholars interested in investigating sound's affective and political dimensions. Her work has been exhibited at Sur Gallery, VIVO Media Arts and Red Head Gallery in Canada and La Galería Azul in Guadalajara and FEMSA La Bienal de Monterrey in Mexico, among other venues. She is an Associate Professor at the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University, where she directs the research-creation studio, cMAS, the Critical MediArtStudio.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital
Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda
Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda, Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital. 2024. 15-minute one-channel video with sound. Video Still
Opening: Sunday, November 24, 6 pm to 8 pm.
Artist Talk: Saturday, November 30,12 pm to 1 pm.
Artist Talk: Saturday, November 30,12 pm to 1 pm.
The video installation will be on view from dusk till dawn between November 24 -30., in a drive-by-drive-in style screening . This video was produced in collaboration with Freya Zinovieff, prOphecy Sun and Steve DiPaola with the participation of Salome Nieto, Matilda Aslizadeh, Maira Cristina Castro, Lois Klassen, Alessandra Santos, Sarah Shamash, Reese Muntean and Jay Tseng.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital (a 15-minute video installation with sound) is part of an ongoing collaborative project directed by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda. The project uses the concept of mitochondria as a metaphor to explore the female body as a generative host of human and non-human life. Known as the powerhouse of the cell, the mitochondria control energy production at the cellular level. In most multicellular organisms, the mother inherits the mitochondrial DNA, thus pointing to the possibility of tracing maternal lineages over time through the female body.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital uses the generative conflations of mitochondria as powerhouse and maternal lineage to explore possible futures in which algorithms may demarcate biological and digital boundaries. Drawing from Lynn Margulis’ (1986) endosymbiotic theory of evolution, which emphasizes cooperation rather than competition, the project also explores symbiosis as a co-creation methodology through participatory dance workshops, bacteria growth experiments and A.I. image generation.
The video combines images and sounds created by nine artists invited to participate in a series of Butoh dance workshops and to grow bacteria individually from their bodies and domestic spaces with a DIY kit. It constructs a visual narrative that reflects the possibility of tracing past lineages of humans and non-humans through the female body. It references how knowledge and information are passed down from generation to generation across bodies, machines, and geographies.
Over six months, the participating artists practiced butoh together to develop a common choreography of movements to reflect on their past and future human and non- human ancestries. They also shared their experiences of growing bacteria through audio, photography, poetry and video. Butoh’s focus on improvisation and emphasis on inviting embodied communal and individual reflections on the nature of being through visual prompts, facilitated connections among participants. The dance workshops turned into rich environments, hosts of energies, affects, ideas, and resources that inspired symbiotic interactions between the participants and generated other projects. These parallel projects and collaborations can be viewed here.
The video is directed and developed by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda in collaboration with sound artists and researchers Freya Zinovieff and prOphecy sun. It incorporates AI images created by artist and researcher Steve Di Paola. Choreographer and dancer Salome Nieto led the butoh workshops with participating artists Matilda Aslizadeh, Maira Cristina Castro, Lois Klassen, Alessandra Santos, Sarah Shamash, prOphecy Sun, Freya Zinovieff and Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda. Reese Muntean and Jay Tseng provided support with photography and video editing.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital builds from previous collaborations exploring the relations between self and technology and the use of computational tools in live performance and video art by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda, Freya Zinovieff, prOphecy Sun and Steve DiPaola.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital (a 15-minute video installation with sound) is part of an ongoing collaborative project directed by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda. The project uses the concept of mitochondria as a metaphor to explore the female body as a generative host of human and non-human life. Known as the powerhouse of the cell, the mitochondria control energy production at the cellular level. In most multicellular organisms, the mother inherits the mitochondrial DNA, thus pointing to the possibility of tracing maternal lineages over time through the female body.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital uses the generative conflations of mitochondria as powerhouse and maternal lineage to explore possible futures in which algorithms may demarcate biological and digital boundaries. Drawing from Lynn Margulis’ (1986) endosymbiotic theory of evolution, which emphasizes cooperation rather than competition, the project also explores symbiosis as a co-creation methodology through participatory dance workshops, bacteria growth experiments and A.I. image generation.
The video combines images and sounds created by nine artists invited to participate in a series of Butoh dance workshops and to grow bacteria individually from their bodies and domestic spaces with a DIY kit. It constructs a visual narrative that reflects the possibility of tracing past lineages of humans and non-humans through the female body. It references how knowledge and information are passed down from generation to generation across bodies, machines, and geographies.
Over six months, the participating artists practiced butoh together to develop a common choreography of movements to reflect on their past and future human and non- human ancestries. They also shared their experiences of growing bacteria through audio, photography, poetry and video. Butoh’s focus on improvisation and emphasis on inviting embodied communal and individual reflections on the nature of being through visual prompts, facilitated connections among participants. The dance workshops turned into rich environments, hosts of energies, affects, ideas, and resources that inspired symbiotic interactions between the participants and generated other projects. These parallel projects and collaborations can be viewed here.
The video is directed and developed by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda in collaboration with sound artists and researchers Freya Zinovieff and prOphecy sun. It incorporates AI images created by artist and researcher Steve Di Paola. Choreographer and dancer Salome Nieto led the butoh workshops with participating artists Matilda Aslizadeh, Maira Cristina Castro, Lois Klassen, Alessandra Santos, Sarah Shamash, prOphecy Sun, Freya Zinovieff and Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda. Reese Muntean and Jay Tseng provided support with photography and video editing.
Mitochondrial Ontologies: Deep Time and the Digital builds from previous collaborations exploring the relations between self and technology and the use of computational tools in live performance and video art by Gabriela Aceves Sepúlveda, Freya Zinovieff, prOphecy Sun and Steve DiPaola.
This project was produced with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.