Presented by MFA Products of Design

Speaker Series: The Art of Orchestrating Agencies

Dec 4, 2024; 6:30 - 8:30pm
Image of a woman with a headset speaker phone looking to the side with text

MFA Products of Design presents a talk with Tega Brain, an Australian artist and environmental engineer born when atmospheric CO2 was below 350ppm. Her work addresses issues of ecology, data, automation, and infrastructure and has taken the form of digital networks controlled by environmental phenomena, schemes for obfuscating personal data, and a wildly popular, online smell-based dating service. Through these provisional systems she investigates how technologies orchestrate and reorchestrate agency.


In 2023, she completed Eccentric Engineering, her PhD by practice at the Australian National University. This practice-led project interrogates how automated systems and AI are reshaping ecological thought. It also develops a model for practice called eccentric engineering that not only critiques the technological status quo but also, importantly, suggests new possibilities, imaginaries and approaches for designing systems that act in concert with their environments and which serve ecosystemic rather than exclusively human agendas.


In 2023, Tega received a Creative Capital award for the development of an experimental series of artworks developing novel carbon offsetting methodologies. She has also won grants and awards from Pioneer WorksEyebeamArs ElectronicaData & Society, and the Australia Council for the Arts. She exhibits internationally having recently shown work at the Smithsonian Museum (Arts and Industries)The ZKM Karlsruhethe Whitney Museum of American Artthe Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, and the Haus der elektronischen Künste.


Her first book, Code as Creative Medium (MIT Press, 2021), is coauthored with Golan Levin. She is an Industry Associate Professor of Integrated Design and Media at New York University and also serves on the board for the School for Poetic Computation.


Tega also has a long-running collaborative practice with artist, Sam Lavigne.

Free and open to the public