René Stettler, Ph.D.

Director

New Gallery Lucerne
P.O. Box 3501
CH-6002 Lucerne / Switzerland

Tel.: +41 (0) 41 370 38 18
E-Mail: stettler at neugalu.ch
Personal Website: rene-stettler.ch

Since 2016, I have been collaborating with the Swiss-born filmmaker Juliette Hüsler. Juliette is the director of photography and film editor in Paul Howard’s new film “Infinite Potential: The Life & Ideas of David Bohm” (2020). Her personal website is https://jujiframes.com

I am a cultural researcher and the founder of the New Gallery Lucerne (1987) and the Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics (1994). Both institutions have been supported by the City and the Canton of Lucerne, the Swiss National Science Foundation, and private donors for many years. Major topics such as Brain–Mind–Culture (1995), Liquid Visions (1997), Frontier Communication: Human Beings, Apes, Whales, Electronic Networks (1999), The Enigma of Consciousness (2001), Consciousness and Teleportation (2005), Consciousness and Quantumcomputers (2007), and The Large, the Small and the Human Mind (2010 and 2012) have been discussed at the Swiss Biennial by internationally acclaimed speakers such as the British mathematician Roger Penrose (Nobel Laureate 2020 in Physics), the Austrian quantum physicist Anton Zeilinger, and the German chaos theorist Otto E. Rössler.

Together with Otto E. Rösser, I co-authored Interventionen: Vertikale und horizontale Grenzüberschreitung (1997). I am the editor of various publications such as Zu einer neuen Quantenphysik des Bewusstseins. Gespräche an den Grenzen der Erkenntnis (2009) with Roy Ascott, Ulrike Gabriel, Ernst von Glasersfeld, Stuart Hameroff, Eduardo Luna, Josef Mitterer, Roger Penrose, Otto E. Rössler, Peter Weibel, and Anton Zeilinger.

In 2003, I received the Swiss Art Award for my work as an intermediary between science and art. In the same year, I also received a prize from the Canton and the City of Lucerne for the Swiss Biennial as a crosscultural and transdisciplinary project.

fffDissertation

The Politics of Post-Industrial Cultural Knowledge Work
School of Art and Media, Faculty of Arts, University of Plymouth / UK
Published by Ambra-Verlag, Vienna / Birkhäuser Verlag, Basel in 2014 with the title:
The Politics of Knowledge Work in the Post-Industrial Culture
modul chin. zeitg. kunst The Scope of the Book modul chin. zeitg. kunst Book Review in "Constructivist Foundations" (Journal, November 2014)

My dissertation conducts in-depth inquiries into the practices, nature and theory of cultural work (knowledge work in the post-industrial culture), and the humanities- and arts-based civic dialogues, which cultural work promotes.

Given the broad neglect of utopian thinking in the mainstream of critical social science and in an attempt to sketch out a vision of an alternative future, the aim of this thesis in positing a different status for cultural work in the “politics of the present” is to outline an “epistemology” for post-industrial cultural work, and to reflect upon the outlook for sustainable, (self-)reflexive and ecological cultural work practices, and their function as a catalyst for civic dialogue and cultural change.

ssAs an intellectual and academic inquiry, the study is associated with the cultural aspects of society, and an ethical and socio-epistemological perspective for cultural work and public dialogue. Picture: My workspace during the write-up process of the thesis around 2009 in Lucerne. more.

Interests and teachings

My interests include the theory of post-industrial cultural work, the signification, interests and aims embodied in cultural production touching on issues of cultural and scientific learning, alternative modes of governance of science and technology, the spatialisation and dissemination of knowledge, cultural workplace identity, knowledge politics, cultural policy, and the biopolitical production of knowledge.

My areas of interest are in the sociology of knowledge and a new form of knowledge work for the humanities and the arts, (self-)reflexivity and non-knowledge, second-order approaches into cultural work practice, and the socio-epistemological-political responsibility of cultural work in the face of industrial society’s logic of accumulation, market rationality and instrumentalism.

My thesis and current work has been most influenced by the work of Michel Foucault and Bruno Latour, but more recently I have undertaken critical readings of contemporary thinkers such as Ulrich Beck, Hardt and Negri, and Doreen Massey, and of contemporary social and political thought on neoliberalism, globalization, and cosmopolitanism. In the past 10 years, I have supervised and examined many bachelor and master theses at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts in Lucerne, Switzerland. In 1994 I founded the Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics.

In my seminars I address the growing public concern about issues to do with scientific research and technological innovation, globalisation, environment, social accountability, and procreation. To cultivate the students’ ability to critically reflect cultural, scientific and technological developments has not been an easy task. A key issue of my methodology in teaching is the cultivation of dialogues and transdisciplinary research ideas in order to support creative processes and channel them into arts and design thinking.

With these seminars I touch on a wide range of subjects—industrial and cultural ethics; the construction of systems that mix politics, science, technology, and nature; the rethinking of the definition and constitution of modernity; the recognition of the connections between nature and culture—between our Western culture and others. I believe that perspectives fusing ideas and solutions are increasingly important. Not only because it is possible to recognize contemporary problems of rationality, reflexivity and transdisciplinarity more directly, but also in order to cultivate our awareness of a broader, fairer, and finer sense of possibility.

Artists-in-Labs

With the Artists-in-Labs-project of the Zurich University of the Arts conducted between 2003 and 2005, we have encouraged education, innovative processes and new methods of knowledge production blending the disciplines of art and science. This project was the first of its kind in Switzerland. It included Swiss Science Labs in a wide range of disciplines such as bio-chemistry, bio-technology, solar energy, the computational and information sciences, electron microscopy, micro-electronics, artificial intelligence research, ecological risk research, micro robotics, nano technology, physics and the environmental sciences. The artists came from the working fields of conceptual art, computer animation, documentary film, human computer interface (HCI) research, living sculpture, performance art, robotic theatre, sound and video art, as well as wearable computing.

Texts

These online papers may be cited or briefly quoted in line with the usual academic conventions. You may also download them for your own personal use. These papers must not be published elsewhere (e.g. mailing lists, bulletin boards etc.) without the author's permission.

a “Bewusstsein und den Geist neu denken - Rethinking Consciousness and the Mind”, Einführung Programm, 14. Schweizer Biennale zu Wissenschaft, Technik + Ästhetik, Verkehrshaus der Schweiz (2022).
a Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "The Mystery of Consciousness", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2020)
a Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "The Enigma of Human Consciousness", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2018)
a Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "The Enigma of Human Consciousness", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2016)
a Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "Be the change we want to see in the world", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2014)
a Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "The Large, the Small and the Human Mind - Part 2", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2012)
a "The Rediscovery of Old Posters Behind Bold Brush Strokes" (2011)
 Report "The Large, the Small and the Human Mind" (2010)
 Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "The Large, the Small and the Human Mind", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2010)
 Is There an Ecosemiotic Perspective for Today's Heterogeneous Knowledges in the Global Culture Industry? (2008)
 On the Role of Consciousness and Visual Analogy in Verena Vanoli’s Multimedia Installation “Can You Hear the Grass Grow?” (2007)
 On the Epistemology of Alois Lichtsteiner's Birch and Mountain Paintings (2007)
 Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "Consciousness and Quantumcomputers", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2007)
 Beyond Wikipedia's and the Universal Library's Technological Determinism (2007)
 Introduction Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics and Aesthetics "Consciousness and Teleportation", Museum of Transport, Lucerne (2005)
 Reframing Semiotic Telematic Knowledge Spaces and the Anthropological Challenge to Designing Interhuman Relations (2006)

Filmfragment 3'18'' (above): Where Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote a part of the Tractatus logico-philosophicus (Skjolden, Norway); René Stettler (2006)

 Mind, Matter, and Quantummechanics: Toward a New Conceptual Theoretical Framework (2005)
 Creating a Sense of Common Ground between the Mind in Experience and the Mind in Science (2005)
 Perception - Translation - Transformation (2005), published in: "artistsinlabs - processes of inquiry" at: Springer Vienna New York
 Book Review: Roy Ascott (Editor) Art, Technology, Consciousness: mind@large (2002)
 On Ruedi Schill's Performance Art (1985)