

I Trust the Internet More Than I Trust Myself
I Trust the Internet More Than I Trust Myself
Before Euripides, before Homer, before the Bible, there was dance. It was how we built community, marked seasons, and moved through grief and joy together. Somewhere along the way, we traded that in. Now we call a head-bop-and-foot-tap dancing.
This workshop continues the inquiry of Are We Searching for God in an Algorithm?, further exploring what we lose when we outsource our knowing to algorithms, but now investigating what we might find when we come back to our bodies. Artist and researcher KT combines a short lecture on trust, intuition, and algorithmic life with beginner contemporary movement.
No experience necessary - just show up as you are.
No practice can promise us the future. The best any practice can offer is presence, and learning how to dance freely builds a capacity to be present in the unknown. That skill translates well beyond the dancefloor.
Format: Lecture + movement + informal conversation
Duration: ~2 hours
Level: Complete beginners welcome
About the facilitator:
KT is a Toronto-based artist, designer, and community researcher. With a Master of Design in Strategic Foresight and Innovation from OCAD University and a background in Social Service Work, she approaches movement and facilitation the way a designer approaches a system, looking for the patterns, relationships, and interactions that shape how we live and make meaning together.
She is the Education and Studio Manager at InterAccess, a Toronto new media arts gallery, where she leads year-round workshop programming and community events. She is also the founder of CEREMONY, an ongoing artistic research project at the intersection of storytelling, technology, and collective reflection.
This workshop is an extension of that methodology, an invitation to make sense of ourselves, together, through movement theory and practice.