This presentation focuses on the participation of the Polish Society for Aesthetics (PTE) in the Horizon Europe MSCA Staff Exchanges project CAPHE, coordinated by the Jagiellonian University and developed within an international consortium of academic and cultural institutions. For PTE, a scholarly society operating largely through voluntary engagement, the project became not only a framework for research and artistic activities, but also a process of institutional learning, confidence-building, and the development of sustainable collaboration capacities. Through seminars, exhibitions, publications, and hybrid artistic projects realized in collaboration with partners from Poland, Portugal, Italy, Kenya, and the United Kingdom, PTE strengthened its national and international networks and expanded its activities in the field of AI, VR, metaverses, blockchain archiving, and contemporary hybrid art practices. The presentation focuses particularly on the educational and critical dimensions of the project, including the development of critical thinking in artistic and academic work with emerging technologies. It also discusses how participation in the CAPHE consortium contributed to long-term institutional cooperation and to the creation of new initiatives, including KONKRET AR.T Gallery, KRENIART Ltd., and the Mantinea Institute. The case of PTE demonstrates the significant role that NGOs and scholarly societies can play in European research and staff exchange programmes as active agents of cultural innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and institutional transformation.
Łukaszewicz et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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