Dr Graham Harwood
Graham's work uses art as a mode of enquiry into technical objects in fields of health, war, oceans and death.
Staff details
Position
Reader in Critical Technical Practice
School
Media, Communications and Cultural Studies
The artist group YoHa (Graham Harwood, Mastuko Yokokoji) are exponents of a form of Critical Technical Practice that is informed by pedagogy, collaborations and tinkering practice. YoHa’s work involves the use of art as a mode of enquiry into technical objects most recently within the fields of health, war, oceans and death.
The space of YoHa’s inquiry is usually populated by an interconnection of technical objects and other kinds of bodies as in a clinic, hospital, battlefield or at sea. The focus of this enquiry is where the flows of power can be reconfigured by the ambiguity of art, not necessarily to make art but to make use of it within a wider enquiry.
Publications and research outputs
Book Section
- Fuller, Matthew and Harwood, Graham. 2016. Abstract Urbanism. In: Rob Kitchin and Sung-Yueh Perng, eds. Code and the City. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138922112
Art Object
- Harwood, Graham and Yokokoji, Matsuko. 2015. Database Addiction.
Film/Video
- Fuller, Matthew and Harwood, Graham. 2010. Requiem for Cod.
Show/Exhibition
- Harwood, Graham; Yokokoji, Matsuko and Demars, Jean. 2009. Coal-Fired Computers. In: "AV Festival 10", Newcastle, United Kingdom, 12-14 May.
- Harwood, Graham; Yokokoji, Matsuko and Wright, Richard. 2008. Tantalum Memorial. In: "2nd Biennial 01SJ Global Festival of Art on the Edge 2008", California State University, 2008-11.
- Harwood, Graham. 2006. Telephone Trottoire (Congolese for "Pavement Radio"). In: "Telephone Trottoire (Congolese for "Pavement Radio")", NODE London, United Kingdom, 3/27/2006 - 5/8/2006.
Software
- Harwood, Graham. 2002. Nine(9) Social Software Research Programme.