Ingrid Cogne (1977, FR) is an artist, facilitator, and researcher working across choreography, visual arts, and academia. Cogne received a PhD in Practice from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna in cotutelle with the Doctoral School of Human and Social...More
Ingrid Cogne (1977, FR) is an artist, facilitator, and researcher working across choreography, visual arts, and academia. Cogne received a PhD in Practice from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna in cotutelle with the Doctoral School of Human and Social Sciences - CEAC at the University of Lille. Her PhD research Displacement(s) as Method(s) (2011-15) questioned the notions of "displacement" on the physical, political and perceptive levels and "method" in between theory and practice, process and product, with the intention to (re-)create "time". Cogne used the notions "situation", "presence", and "performativity" as filters to articulate her research between body, spoken, and written languages in a matrix composed of five methods, three practices, and the art piece WORK (2015). In 2014, Cogne was Artistic Director of Dansbyrån (SE) and curated the series CONVERSATION. In 2016, she co-edited the publication Dansbaren--The Mob without Flash published by Dansbyrån. Since 2015, Cogne works as postdoctoral researcher at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, where she co-leads the research project Six Formats in dialogue with Felicitas Thun-Hohenstein. Six Formats analyses various formats commonly used in relation to art-based knowledge articulation and/or communication in the present day: publication, exhibition, symposium, lecture-performance, screening, and workshop. Six Formats creates situations of dialogue, in, on, and between each of its formats. Each format builds upon a particular constellation of a partner institution and a group of participants invited as co-researchers. Six formats facilitates processes of on-going self-reflection and re-articulation aiming for reciprocal attentiveness to the respective needs of the project, its partners, and co-researchers. Six formats, which runs from February 2015 to June 2018, is funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF, PEEK, AR291-G21) and hosted by the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.
Less