📄 Extracted Text (657 words)
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HED: When Art Becomes Science
DEK: Art has always been the product of art-science collaborations. 2008 may
be when we finally see science emerge as the result.
PQ: TK
WC: 597
The ongoing dance between art and science has come a long way since its
most popular image was that of a glowing rabbit. Eduardo Kac's transgenic
green bunny started a trend of bio-art that allowed the world to examine the
social and ethical ramifications of science. But although art-science has
propelled art into these and other new dimensions, science has remained
squarely within its own realm, largely unaffected by the persuasions of the arts.
But there's a sense that this may be changing. While it's hardly a novelty
that scientists and artists would commingle with grand intentions, there is a
palpable sense that the expectations of these collaborations are now much
higher than before. A new breed of contemporary cross-over art-scientists are
starting to explore a future for science which incorporates the thought process of
the artist.
Last November in Prague, creative thinkers from around the world gathered
at the art-science Mutamorphosis conference, at which questions were raised as
to why only one project out of tens could actually demonstrate a collaboration
that led to success on both art and science fronts. That project was Blue Morph,
a partnership born out of an artist-in-lab program. Jim Gimzewski, a director at
the California Nanosystems Institute, discovered that he was picking up
vibrations from yeast cells with atomic force microscopy, and reached out to
Victoria Vesna, media artist and director of the Art I Sci Center at UCLA.
Influenced by her artistic interpretation of his data, Gimzewski translated the
vibration patterns into audio. The research ultimately resulted in both a
published paper in the journal Science and a work of public art—a room in
Prague's GIANT gallery steeped in saturated blue, alive with nano-images of
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butterfly wing patterns, and surrounded by the sound of a caterpillar morphing
into a butterfly.
"It's just the start of a new type of art-science." says California-based Vesna,
"At this point, probably only one out of 10 art-science collaborations result in a
real interaction like ours." But a growing number of art-scientists are realizing the
potential of these interactions. Last year, BeiLAB was established as China's
contemporary research platform where artists and scientists can compare
creative processes. The recently opened Science Gallery will be Ireland's
version of an innovation center and in France, David Edwards, Harvard
professor of biomedical engineering, is hoping to kick-start the new art-science
by bringing leading artists and scientists together under one roof.
Le Laboratoire is Edwards' new experimental arts and science center in
Paris, a facility that he hopes will allow art and science to merge in equal parts
and catalyze a new form of innovation. By focusing on the process of
experimentation rather than the goals, Edwards believes that artists and
scientists will be more inclined to work together and step out of the mainstream.
Partnerships should allow the arts and sciences to feed off each other, find
creativity in unexplored places, and drive an emerging dialogue between the
leading thinkers of the two cultures.
At the Serpentine Gallery in London last October, top-tier scientists like
physicist Neil Turok presented their work to some of the more scientifically-
aware risk-takers of the art world like Francesca von Habsburg and Hans Ulrich
Obrist. The attraction between art and science in 2008 will only grow as new
questions are asked of the relationship. "We might not know what the exact
results will be," Edwards says, "but we know that artscience will benefit us
culturally and educationally."
As both the arts and sciences forge ahead into unmarked realms, the trend
of interdisciplinary thinking is having an effect. Scientists and artists both realize
the need to tap into new creative sources.—Don Hoyt Gorman
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