Talk: Günseli Yalcinkaya

06:30pm - 07:45pm, Thu 23 Oct 2025

How can folklore help us to navigate today’s digital chaos? Hear from artist Günseli Yalcinkaya in this special event

Black background with two images on the top left and bottom right with the words weird and reality written above

Talk: Günseli Yalcinkaya

6:30pm, Thu 23 Oct 2025

How can folklore help us to navigate today’s digital chaos? Hear from artist Günseli Yalcinkaya in this special event

This event is part of our Past Programme

Internet Folklore is a study on online culture, emerging technologies, and the myths embedded within those systems. It charts the emergence of folklore as a primary lens to understand a new era of digital communication, where a return to oral tradition has sparked a wave of online mythologies that inform the way we see ourselves and others, from the existential threat of non-human agents such as chatbots and embodied AI, to the growing posthuman appreciation of our own hybrid identities as shaped by algorithms. 

This artist's talk by Günseli Yalcinkaya explores this complex lattice of online culture to present a new media theory that invites the distant past into the near future.

 

Details on how to access the event will be confirmed upon registration. Please check your junk folders if you haven't received an email from TPG staff confirming your place. 

Biography

Günseli Yalcinkaya is an artist, curator and writer based in London, with a particular focus on online culture and advanced technologies. She is a Contributing Editor at Dazed and the former host of Dazed podcast, Logged On. She has appeared in talks and panels at the Architectural Association, BFI, Somerset House, Sónar+D, Serpentine Galleries, Unsound Festival, Vienna Digital Cultures and X Museum. Her essays have been published in CURA, Dazed Magazine, Spike Art, Vogue, Zora Zine and 032c, as well as in books for Aksioma, Julia Stoschek and LAS Art Foundation. 
 

 

Ticketing

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The event is organised in collaboration with the Centre for the Study of the Networked Image & Digital x Data Research Centre at London South Bank University.