Disintegrator

HOTHOUSE: The Future of Demonstration (w/ Sylvia Eckermann & Gerald Nestler)

15 snips
Oct 28, 2025
This lively conversation features Sylvia Eckermann, an innovative media artist from Vienna, and Gerald Nestler, an artist and theorist with insights from finance. They discuss the concept of ‘HOTHOUSE,’ exploring how artists can advocate for democracy amidst crises like climate change. They redefine demonstration as collaborative action, highlight the intertwining of art with civic engagement, and address the idea of the 'derivative condition'—a reflection on how financial turbulence affects societal futures. Their insights into resistance and adaptability ignite a thought-provoking dialogue.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ADVICE

Make Demonstrations Through Collective Doing

  • Prioritize collective making over pre-designed demonstrations; gather people and see what happens together.
  • Use 'demonstration' as tech, pedagogy and political practice to probe futures rather than stage spectacle.
INSIGHT

The 'Derivative Condition' Shapes The Future

  • Nestler coins the 'derivative condition' to describe how finance's derivative logic remakes the future and governs society.
  • He argues volatility maths and derivatives shifted power from representation to performative systems shaping decisions and time itself.
ANECDOTE

From Art To Trading For Insight

  • Nestler recounts leaving art to work as a broker to learn how markets build power and time-based instruments.
  • That three-year experience grounded his later theory about finance's social and political influence.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app