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All Outputs (4)

The Force Majeure: Selected readings on climate change (2019)
Exhibition / Performance
Dillon, T. The Force Majeure: Selected readings on climate change. [https://www.floatinguniversity.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/ClimateCare_Program_Doubble_Web_31-07.pdf]. Performed at Floating University, Berlin. 1 August 2019 - 10 August 2020. (Unpublished)

Invited contributor to "Climate Care, A Curriculum for Urban Practice", curated by Gilly Karjevsky & Rosario Talevi, as part of Raumlabors, Floating University. For the programme, I selected a number of readings, to perform at the daily reading cy... Read More about The Force Majeure: Selected readings on climate change.

Surveillé·e·s (2019)
Exhibition / Performance
Dillon, T. Surveillé·e·s. [Recycled cardboard]. Exhibited at Navan, Co Meath. 12 January 2019 - 1 March 2019. (Unpublished)

Curator Nora Hickey's group exhibition originated in the Centre Culturel Irlandais in Paris. With work by Karl Burke, Alan Butler, Willie Doherty, Roseanne Lynch, Colin Martin, Ian Wieczorek and others, the show considered a world of ubiquitous, visi... Read More about Surveillé·e·s.

AHRC Design Research Showcase, London Design Festival (2018)
Exhibition / Performance
Dillon, T. AHRC Design Research Showcase, London Design Festival. [http://repairacts.net/]. 20 September 2018 - 23 September 2018. (Unpublished)

Repair Acts invited to showcase as part of AHRC Design Research Showcase, London Design Festival 2018. Repair Acts is an international and multidisciplinary network of people working on topics relating to repair, care and maintenance cultures.... Read More about AHRC Design Research Showcase, London Design Festival.

Are You Still Watching? (2017)
Exhibition / Performance
Dillon, T. Are You Still Watching?. [http://www.polarproduce.org/works/are-you-still-watching/]. Performed at Arnolfini, Bristol. 20 October 2017 - 20 October 2017. (Unpublished)

Are You Still Watching? draws on the histories of CCTV installation, animal mythology and critical-eco narratives to explore and speculate on the continued normalisation of machine vision and surveillance technologies within our urban spaces.