Kasalukuyan - The Present
This act places an intense focus on man's relationship to the machine and how technology has come to dominate our lives. By tracing the history of industrialization and its subsequent impact on people and culture, we can foster a greater sense of responsibility to properly engage with the developing technologies of our current reality.
“Increasingly industrialized European (and North American) cultures as a whole were seen to be a separate class, distinct from all others. The polarities were numerous and obvious: metal versus wood; machine versus human or animal power; science versus superstition and myth; synthetic versus organic; progressive versus stagnant. All aspects could be linked to these polarities.”
Machines as the Measure of Men, Michael Adas