Shabnam Syed Khan, former Visiting Professor and Teaching-Fellow at Harvard University, has a doctorate from Harvard University and an MA from Massachusetts College of Art and Design. She was also Professor of Design at the National College of Arts, Lahore. Her multidisciplinary education supports her transdisciplinary approach to teaching, art practice, and home-making. Currently invested in theorizing a speculative model of life-work pedagogy, she calls Consciousness Curriculum (CC), her CC projects are calls for re-theorizing established systems and concepts e.g. democracy, higher education, creativity, defense, art, progress, gender equality, and nature, whose accepted notions have lost efficacy in the 21st-century.
Interactive
Romantic Provocations is a roaming, shape-shifting exhibition that blurs the borders between art, science, politics, and public imagination. Part laboratory, part collective pause, it invites visitors into a living system where romance becomes method and friction becomes fuel. Across eight provocations, from algorithmic desire to intimacy by design, artists, scientists, and designers unsettle familiar narratives and open new ones. Multiple storylines unfold at once. Conversations remain porous. Ideas migrate across cities and disciplines, gathering new meaning as they travel and it all begins at WOW in Karachi. Visitors don’t simply observe; they participate in a slow, evolving negotiation of belief, desire, care, and disobedience. The result is a living archive of contradictions, gestures, and connections: a collective attempt to build worlds where love is disruptive, ambiguity is defended, and complexity is a shared inheritance
Interactive
Romantic Provocations is a roaming, shape-shifting exhibition that blurs the borders between art, science, politics, and public imagination. Part laboratory, part collective pause, it invites visitors into a living system where romance becomes method and friction becomes fuel. Across eight provocations, from algorithmic desire to intimacy by design, artists, scientists, and designers unsettle familiar narratives and open new ones. Multiple storylines unfold at once. Conversations remain porous. Ideas migrate across cities and disciplines, gathering new meaning as they travel and it all begins at WOW in Karachi. Visitors don’t simply observe; they participate in a slow, evolving negotiation of belief, desire, care, and disobedience. The result is a living archive of contradictions, gestures, and connections: a collective attempt to build worlds where love is disruptive, ambiguity is defended, and complexity is a shared inheritance