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The Practice of

Art and Science


The Practice of

Art and Science


Gerfried Stocker
Andreas J. Hirsch
Contents
Gerfried Stocker, Andreas J. Hirsch
07 Encounters of Great Minds and What is Needed for Them

Martin Honzik, Veronika Liebl


10 Starting the European Digital Art and Science Network

16 The European Digital Art and Science Network

20 Scientific Partners and Residencies



20 CERN
24 Artist Residency at CERN
25 CERN: A Journey Through the World of Science—Semiconductor


30 ESO—The European Southern Observatory
32 Artist Residency at ESO
33 Art and Science: A Cosmic Inspiration—María Ignacia Edwards
38 Artist Residency at ESO
39 A Trip Close to Outer Space—Quadrature


44 ESA—The European Space Agency
46 Artist Residency at ESA
49 Star Storm—Aoife van Linden Tol


50 Artist Residency at Fraunhofer MEVIS
51 STEAM Imaging—An artist in residency program
focusing on links between art and science
53 Whose scalpel—Yen Tzu Chang

Andreas J. Hirsch
56 The Practice of Art and Science
57 I. ENTERING NEW GROUND
71 II. EXPERIENCES AND LESSONS
86 III CULTURES, PLACES, AND AGENTS

Jurij Krpan
92 Art&Science. The relationship that is not existing but yet it’s functioning

Victoria Vesna
94 Anticipatory Art Science: Networks to NanoSystems

Horst Hörtner
106 Art, Technology, and Society as Research Practice.
Ars Electronica Futurelab


110 Cultural Partners and Activities
114 Ars Electronica
117 Activities
120 Elements of Art and Science
138 The Alchemists of Art and Science
154 Radical Atoms


162 CPN – Center for the Promotion of Science
Activities
165
Art + Science 2016
166
Art + Science 2017
170


180 DIG gallery
Art & Science vol. 1 – 3
184


188 Fundación Zaragoza Ciudad del Conocimiento
Activities
190
Cycle I: Reverberadas
193
Cycle II: BIOESTETICA. Exhibition Postnature
199


208 GV Art London
#postARTandSCIENCE
210


212 Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova Institute
Activities
216
Earth Without Humans I
217
Earth Without Humans II
222


230 LABORAL Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial
Activities
232
Materia Prima
236
Monsters of the Machine
250


264 Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
Activities
266
TRAUMA—Built to Break
268
SEEING—What are you looking at?
269
HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY
288
SOUND CHECK: Make it. Play it.
300
Preface

The cultural and intellectual diversity of Europe’s coun-


tries, regions, and cities is a huge opportunity, since cross-border
exchange and collaboration among different disciplines, lands,
and cultures are precisely what make innovation flourish. The
EU network launched by Ars Electronica in 2014 is dedicated to
the exciting symbiosis of media art and science. Seven renowned
artistic and cultural institutions as well as leading players in scientific
research including CERN, ESO, ESA, and Fraunhofer MEVIS have
formed a transcontinental platform in which scientific and artistic
issues, methods and visions are interlinked. Artists have the chance
to visit some of the world’s foremost scientific facilities and gain
insights into scientific research practices; the scientists, for their part,
are exposed to new perspectives, the focus of which is on the social
upheavals triggered by scientific progress. The inspiring results to
which such a process of exchange between art and science can
lead are demonstrated by this catalog, a compendium of the
European Digital Art and Science Network’s three-year history.

Enjoy and be amazed!

Thomas Drozda
Federal Minister for Arts and Culture, Constitution and Media

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Vorwort

Die kulturelle und intellektuelle Vielfalt in den Ländern, Regionen und


Städten Europas ist eine enorme Chance. Gerade im grenzüberschreitenden
Austausch und der Zusammenarbeit zwischen unterschiedlichen Disziplinen,
Ländern und Kulturen gedeiht Neues. Das 2014 von Ars Electronica initiierte
EU-Netzwerk widmet sich der spannenden Symbiose von Medienkunst und
Wissenschaft. Sieben renommierte Kunst- und Kultureinrichtungen sowie
führende Player im Bereich der Forschung, beispielsweise CERN, ESO, ESA
oder Fraunhofer MEVIS, bilden eine europaweite Plattform. Wissenschaftliche
und künstlerische Fragestellungen, Methoden und Visionen werden mit-
einander verknüpft. Künstlerinnen und Künstler haben die Möglichkeit, Leucht-
türme der Wissenschaft zu besuchen und Einblick in die wissenschaftliche
Forschungspraxis zu bekommen. Die Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissen-
schaftler wiederum lernen neue Perspektiven kennen, in deren Mittelpunkt die
gesellschaftlichen Umwälzungen im Gefolge der Erkenntnisfortschritte stehen.
Zu welch inspirierenden Ergebnissen ein solcher Austausch zwischen Kunst
und Wissenschaft führen kann, zeigt der nun vorliegende Katalog, der drei
Jahre European Digital Art and Science Network zusammenfasst.

Viel Vergnügen und Staunen beim Lesen!

Thomas Drozda
Bundesminister für Kunst und Kultur, Verfassung und Medien

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6
Gerfried Stocker, Andreas J. Hirsch

Encounters of Great
Minds and What
is Needed for Them

This book is about the encounters of great minds. The Practice of Art
and Science looks at the experiences and lessons from the successful work of the
European Digital Art and Science Network. In order to enable collaboration of art
and science on the highest possible level one could strive for, an alliance was
created that brings together leading European science organizations, an array of
outstanding cultural institutions in the field of digital art, and Ars Electronica as a
kind of “mothership” of the work between art, technology and society.
With support from the European Union this network was able to realize
a series of artists’ residencies between 2015 and 2017. They took place at such
spectacular and groundbreaking research facilities as the European Southern
Observatory ESO in Chile, CERN’s Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, or in touch
with the planetary missions of the European Space Agency ESA. An additional
artist-in-residency program in conjunction with the European Digital Art and
Science Network was established by Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image
Computing MEVIS and Ars Electronica Linz.
The practice of art and science has been part of the genetic code of
Ars Electronica since the beginnings of the Festival in 1979, when it was founded
by artist Hubert Bognermayr, scientist Herbert W. Franke, and journalist Hannes
Leopoldseder. This “Festival for Art, Technology, and Society” presented art also
as a catalyst, which is enabling transformation in those other areas, and thus
designed its conferences and exhibitions to allow for ongoing encounters
between art and science. In 1996 the growing interest in collaborations between
art and science also led to the foundation of two permanent platforms of learn-
ing, research, and presentation: Ars Electronica Center as a “Museum of the
Future” and Ars Electronica Futurelab as a “Laboratory for Future Innovations.”
Since then Ars Electronica offers a complete ecosystem for innovation, which
actually replicates the entire artistic process from inspiration to experiments on
to creation and does so by involving a wide range of disciplines and skills.
At Ars Electronica artists, scientists, researchers, designers, and engineers have
been collaborating for many years on scientific as well as artistic projects, and
presented their results jointly at conferences like “Pixelspaces“ or lectured and
performed side by side at the annual theme conferences.

7
Around the turn of the millennium the scope of Ars Electronica
widened to Life Sciences and Bio Art, a development that was also reflected in
the 1999 Festival LifeScience and the 2000 Festival NEXT SEX. Sex in the Age of its
Procreative Superfluousness. With the 2005 Festival HYBRID—living in paradox, and
the creation of the new Prix Ars Electronica category “Hybrid Art” in 2006/2007,
the newly emerging hybrid forms of research and art received additional attention.
When in 2011 Ars Electronica Festival, ORIGIN—how it all begins, was realized with
CERN as a cooperation partner, this was the beginning of a lasting and far-reaching
collaboration of Ars Electronica with this leading research organization. From
the success of the “Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN Award”and the three
residencies of its winners at CERN and Ars Electronica Futurelab between 2012
and 2014finally evolved the plan to open up this axis of collaboration into a
network for art and science residencies on a European scale.
The idea behind the European Digital Art and Science Network was to
create interesting and successful cases that would stimulate even more dedication
in a growing number of science organizations and also to prepare the ground for a
rising acceptance within funding bodies to give money for this kind of projects in
order to foster the exchange of art and science. From its very start, the project
sparked a rapidly growing interest from artists as well as from institutions. As
the project went along, the network of partners continued to grow. Probably the
best way to value the success of an initiative like this one is the number of similar
activities that come up. Also in this respect we may consider the residency
program to be successful. In the meantime this increasing attention in facilitating
such collaborations even extends to organizations from outside the field of art
and science.
Work in the European Digital Art and Science Network turned out to be
a learning experience for everybody involved. At the core of this learning process
lay something we may call the “art of creating successful encounters of artists and
scientists.” This kind of expertise is about shaping a set of methods that help
facilitate such encounters: find the right partners, prepare the ground for the
exchange, and support them along the way. Nurtured by Ars Electronica’s eco-
system for innovation, this included the entire “production chain” of an artistic
project from idea, research, and concept to production and presentation. With
the knowledge of Ars Electronica Futurelab from many years of working with
artists, and the skillful practice of our cultural partners and of Ars Electronica
Festival in presenting digital works of art, this made it possible for the artists
to realize projects flowing from the results of their residencies and reach inter-
national audiences with them.

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The development of methods has in fact been successful in various
cases where creativity was employed outside the world of art. The success of
“design thinking” for instance is based on a very simple idea and may serve as a
good example for this: It is not about telling people who originally do not come
from a creative background how to be creative themselves, but about giving them
a guideline on how to deal with and work inside creative situations. An approach
similar to “design thinking” could lead to a kind of “art and science thinking,“
and the contours of such new “art and science thinking” are becoming visible
through the lessons learned from the European Digital Art and Science Network
described here.
Creating successful examples of mutually fruitful encounters of art and
science prepares the ground for something that should be the larger goal behind
the entire endeavor: To create a new culture of collaboration of art and science
that proves useful to society. However, the shared responsibilities of all partners
involved can only become productive for society when the process involves the
expertise from cultural organizations in facilitating and moderating the encounters
and in presenting the results to prepared and informed audiences.
With this perspective towards society in mind, we hope that this
publication will serve as a tool that is both effective and useful, which inspires,
encourages, and instructs future projects, enabling encounters of art and
science—that is, meetings of great minds.

Gerfried Stocker (AT), born 1964, is a media artist and an electronic engineer.
Since 1995 he has been a managing and an artistic director of Ars Electronica.

Andreas J. Hirsch (AT), born 1961, is a writer, art curator, and photographic artist.
Since 1996 he has been involved with Ars Electronica as curator, juror and artist.

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Martin Honzik, Veronika Liebl

Starting the European


Digital Art and
Science Network

The European Digital Art and Science Network can proudly point to a
host of substantial accomplishments—a total of 110 activities showcasing 381
artists from 40+ countries. This project underscores the significance of the
European cultural landscape’s diversity beginning with project development,
through creation & production processes, all the way to presentation and
interaction with those partaking of these works. This success is based on three
years of close cooperation among curators, producers, and promoters working
according to a shared agenda, at the top of which is fostering the collaboration
of artists and experts on scientific themes, opening up new areas of activity for
artists, and inspiring audiences throughout Europe to behold what these very
creative people have done.

Europe’s Cultural Landscape in One Project


One of the primary objectives of the European Digital Art and Science
Network’s concept was selecting an array of partner institutions that mirrors the
“essence” of Europe. Europe’s cultural diversity and the complexity of its overall
geopolitical situation made up the network’s qualitative basis as well as the
guidelines for the final selection of its members. An essential aspect of this was
achieving the greatest possible diversity with regard to individual regional and/or
national positioning and the members’ respective cultural missions.

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The Cultural Partners
• DIG gallery as pioneer of media art in an art-and-science context in Slovakia;
• Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova Institute in Slovenia as one of the world’s longest-
established institutions for media art and driving force behind the ongoing
redefinition of the avant-garde;
• Center for the Promotion of Science in Serbia as a state institution with an
ambitious long-term focus on getting across scientific content;
• LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial as one of Spain’s as well as
Europe’s largest and most important media art institutions with an educational
program focused on its region;
• Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation in Spain as a municipal project with
remarkable infrastructure in the field of new media and technology that’s open
to citizens as well as to local and international artists;
• Science Gallery Dublin, Ireland with its qualitatively superb educational
programs;
• GV Art in London as the consortium’s partner that has done trailblazing work
opening up new markets for an artistic genre that is practically nonexistent on
the traditional art market;
• Ars Electronica as one of the institutions of longest standing and greatest
importance in the media art genre, and which, due to its tripartite orientation
as a cultural, educational, and R&D facility, has served as overall project
coordinator.

Mutual Benefits
The interaction of small and large cultural institutions is one of the
most important factors contributing to successful European collaboration.
In projects like the European Digital Art and Science Network, small cultural
organizations and initiatives gain access to resources that, in many instances,
are essential to their survival, and thereby have the opportunity to make a name
for themselves throughout the continent and to establish relationships with
renowned cultural protagonists. Large cultural institutions, on the other hand,
profit from the dynamics, the innovativeness, and the community orientation of
their smaller partners. Europe’s future programs to foster culture and creativity
have to increasingly take advantage of precisely this diversity and assure that it
continues to thrive.

Curatorial Exchange
Instead of organizing individual touring exhibitions or mobility
programs, the European Digital Art and Science Network has, from its very
inception, accentuated wide-ranging curatorial and intercultural exchange.
Particular emphasis has been placed on taking into account the individual
backgrounds of the respective project partners as well as considering important
regional and/or national networks in the programming process. Four open calls

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issued jointly by all network members attracted submissions from 53 countries.
Jurors and curators representing all partners met to work on project proposals,
nominations, co-productions, and mobile exhibition projects. This is a way to
take advantage of synergies, and offer an international showcase to up-and-
coming artists in the respective member nations.

Scientific Partners
Whereas diversity was pivotal in the choice of the cultural partners,
other criteria applied to the selection of the scientific partners. The task was to
identify Europe’s leading scientific institutions, cutting-edge innovators that set
the global standard for excellence. The network found just the right scientific
partners! CERN, ESA, ESO, and Fraunhofer MEVIS each enjoy an international
reputation and were gladly willing to provide the selected artists access to
internal R&D work, to the unique technical infrastructure available at the respec-
tive facilities, and to their staff scientists. The partners succeeded in establishing
a form of exchange and a culture of cooperation in accordance with what had
already been defined in the network’s mission statement and the selection and
constellation of the partners themselves. That this goal has indeed been achieved
is amply attested to by the results of the residency projects by the participating
artists. The point of this cooperation is not to reciprocally enhance the renown
of the respective members; rather, it is to pursue shared interests and mutual
inspiration, and to blaze new trails in collaboration, production, and presentation.
The scientific-artistic work proceeded jointly, with maximum openness and
curiosity, on potential solutions at the highest substantive level.

Residencies und Presentations


A specially developed methodology and Ars Electronica’s wealth of
experience provided the point of departure for this collaboration between art and
science within the framework of the European Digital Art and Science Network’s
six residencies. During a multi-day initial visit to the scientific institution, the
particular artist, accompanied by Ars Electronica Futurelab staff experts, presents
a concept, delineates precise objectives in discussions with the institution, and
selects scientists well suited for collaboration on this project. Following a short
pause during which the artist works in his/her own studio to make concrete
preparations for the residency, the artist travels to the scientific partner’s facility
in Chile, Germany, The Netherlands, or Switzerland to spend several weeks
engaged in scientific encounter. Finally, the artist works together with Ars
Electronica Futurelab’s internationally renowned staff of experts in specialized
fields such as virtual environments, robotics, media art & creativity, and architec-
ture, as well as Futurelab’s leading-edge technical infrastructure. This provides
artists with the best possible care and support while they are involved in develop-
ment processes having to do with digital technologies. Residencies and co-

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productions with their relatively high demand for resources and communication
are also suitable formats for a calculated effort to spotlight female artists working
in the digital art genre, which is why the European Digital Art and Science
Network’s jury deliberately selected five women and three men for its six residen-
cies at scientific institutions and at Ars Electronica Futurelab.

Targeted Matchmaking
The 815 entries submitted in response to the European Digital Art and
Science Network’s four open calls illustrate the enormous interest in programs
that open doors to bring artists and scientists together. This is a search not only
for mentors, but also for protagonists in science and business who desire to
collaborate to advance their personal interests. European research subsidy
programs such as Horizon 2020 have already recognized the importance of this
interface and made possible groundbreaking projects like STARTS and FEAT. And
it would be highly desirable for future cultural programs to continue to increase
the opportunities for artists to have structured access to interdisciplinary
exchange. Meanwhile, essential framework conditions, such as modalities for
collaboration and intellectual property rights, have to be defined for such
programs.

Cultural Organizations as Intermediaries


Bringing together protagonists from art and science in a way that is
sustainable and sensible for all involved entails challenges. It is imperative to
develop a common language, to build up mutual respect, and to connect very
different worlds. This is precisely the role that has been assumed by the individual
members of the European Digital Art and Science Network. As facilitators, they
are an integral part of the project’s success. Naturally, cultural organizations
represent the interests of individual artists. They can open doors to scientific
institutions and assure that the collaborations they stage are partnerships of
equals. For this decisive intermediary role in the future, however, specifically
targeted training & peer education programs will be increasingly important.
Accordingly, this should be taken into consideration in future cultural programs.

Educational Programs as Key to the Digital Age


The programs carried out under the aegis of the European Digital Art
and Science Network have clearly shown the essential importance of educational
programs for the artistic use of digital technologies. It is undisputed that digital
technologies open up an unprecedented range of new options for artistic
creativity. At the same time, the skills and experience that artists bring with them
vary tremendously and constitute in many instances a barrier that prevents them
from being admitted to programs like international residencies. This is a reason to
foster artists who have ceased thinking in conventional categories, whose

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creative work follows an integrative approach, and who have assumed positions
as scientists in their own right. To make this step possible, Europe has to improve
access to, first and foremost, its cultural subsidy programs and support the
financing of practice-oriented training & continuing professional education
programs for artists at various points in their career.

The exhibitions conceived and executed as educational platforms


within the framework of the European Digital Art and Science Network success-
fully impart essential scientific content to the visitors who partake of them. And
art has long since been integrated into the STEAM educational programs
designed to foster creative thinking as well as social, ecological, and economic
reflection on the part of kids and young people. Especially in facets of digital
media education, which gets far too little attention in traditional school curricula,
artists can furnish expertise in the critical application of these media and thus
make an important contribution to learning. In this spirit, six cultural partners of
the European Digital Art and Science Network have become involved in educa-
tional programs for youngsters both in schools and out-of-school learning. The
experience gleaned thereby shows that artists can assume an important role in
the educational ecosystem, and this simultaneously opens up new fields of
activity for them.

New Programs, New Audiences


Moreover, the European Digital Art and Science Network has made it
clear that digital technologies and platforms per se aren’t all it takes to reach out
and connect with new target audiences; the degree of innovation of the program-
ming itself also plays a decisive role. Europe is still far removed from presenting
across-the-board cultural programs at the nexus of art and science. As a result,
several of the Network’s cultural institutions entered into uncharted territory as
they had to go about arousing a regional or national audience’s interest in their
activities to begin with. Thus, the development of a longer-term strategy
designed to persuade new target groups to get involved in cultural programs like
these calls for a modicum of pioneering.

14
Cultural Cooperation to Meet Europe’s Challenges
Mastering many of the social, ecological, and economic challenges of
this day and age will be possible only with creative new approaches. The inclu-
sion of artists and cultural producers in essential social and innovation processes
can not only make art accessible to broader segments of the general public, it
can also offer artists new areas of activity and provide businesspeople and
scientists with new approaches to raising their productivity. An essential factor in
this is digitization. Breadth of vision, great insight, and competent application of
creativity are ascribed to artists—a set of skills that, in addition to technological
and scientific advances, will be necessary to succeed in an age of digital technol-
ogies. Cultural projects like the European Digital Art and Science Network
illuminate art’s role as a catalyst for processes of social renewal in ways that are
attractive to audiences.

Martin Honzik (AT) is an artist and Director of Ars Electronica’s Festival, Prix,
and Exhibitions divisions. He studied Visual Experimental Design at Linz Art
University and has an MA in Culture & Media Management from University of
Linz and ICCM Salzburg. From 1998 to 2001, he worked at OK Center for
Contemporary Art and in 2001, he joined the staff of Ars Electronica Future
Lab, where, until 2005, his responsibilities included exhibition design, art in
architecture, interface design, event design, and project management.
Since 2006, Martin Honzik is director of Ars Electronica Festival and Prix Ars
Electronica and is in charge of exhibitions in Ars Electronica Center as well as Ars Electronica’s
international exhibition projects. His recent achievements, in addition to numerous art projects
(e.g. Ganz Linz, Vernichtungsaktion), include co-founding the u19 – CREATE YOUR WORLD
festival for young people and serving as head of production and director of the 2012 voestalpine
Klangwolke. Martin Honzik was one of the head curators and has been serving as jury member
for the European Digital Art and Science Network.

Veronika Liebl (AT) is currently Director of Finance & Organization of Ars


Electronica’s Festival, Prix, and Exhibitions divisions. She studied Economics
and Management Science at Johannes Kepler University in Linz, with
study visits at Harvard University (US) and Université de Fribourg (CH).
She is currently working on an MBA in Innovation Management at LIMAK
Linz—Austrian Business School. Since 2011 she is in charge of cultural
management for the Festival/Prix/Exhibitions department at Ars Electronica
Linz GmbH, responsible for finances, human resources, public funding,
internal operations, and project management. Recently, she is primarily in control of all
European collaboration projects under Creative Europe, Horizon 2020, and Erasmus+ and,
together with her team, she has carried out numerous EU projects both as project coordinator
and as partner, including the European Digital Art and Science Network.

15
European
Digital Art
and Science
Network

The main idea of the network is to draw


a bow between micro- and macro-cosmos
of science and digital arts.

16
In cooperation with seven artistic and cultural
institutions as well as the European Space
Agency (ESA), CERN, the European Southern
Observatory (ESO), and Fraunhofer MEVIS, Ars
Electronica launched the European Digital Art
and Science Network, an international initiative offering artists the chance to
spend several weeks at CERN, ESO, Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image
Computing MEVIS, and Ars Electronica Futurelab. The network aims to link up
scientific aspects and ideas with approaches used in digital art. Fostering
interdisciplinary work and intercultural exchange as well as gaining access
to new target audiences are among its declared goals. There is also strong
emphasis on art’s role as a catalyst in processes of social renewal. By creating
images and narratives dealing with the potential risks and rewards inherent in
technological and scientific development, artists exert an important influence
on how our society comes to terms with these innovations.

The European Union Creative Europe program provides half the financing of the
European Digital Art and Science Network, the remainder is contributed on an
equal basis by the participating institutions. Creative Europe is the European
Commission’s framework program for the cultural and creative sectors. In
cooperation with all the partner organizations, Ars Electronica issued four
worldwide open calls for residencies, and besides, Fraunhofer MEVIS and Ars
Electronica established an artist-in-residency program in conjunction with the
European Digital Art and Science Network. Two calls (fall 2014 and winter 2015)
were for residencies at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile, one
(spring 2015) for a residency at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, one (spring 2016)
for a residency at the European Space Agency (ESA), and one residency
at Fraunhofer MEVIS in Bremen emerged from a competition by invitation
(spring 2017).

From among the entries, the juries of leading experts selected five artists (or
artist groups) to take part in the residencies. The artists spent a few weeks at the
scientific institutions drawing inspiration from their mentors and their scientific
work. Subsequently, they spent an additional residency at Ars Electronica
Futurelab, where mentors assisted the artists in the creation and development
of new works inspired by their previous scientific residency. The results of the
residencies as well as dozens of contextualized artworks have been presented in
modular exhibitions and presentations premiering in 2015 and then in 2016 and
2017 at Festival Ars Electronica in Linz and running at the seven artistic and
cultural partner institutions.

17
European Digital Art and Science Network

Partner Network
The basis of the European Digital Art and Science Network is a
big manifold network consisting of four scientific mentoring
institutions: CERN, ESO—European Southern Observatory,
ESA—European Space Agency, and Fraunhofer Institute
for Medical Image Computing MEVIS, representing Europe’s
finest in scientific research, and offering artists the chance to
spend several weeks at their premises and the Ars Electronica
Futurelab, providing state-of-the-art technical production
possibilities in a transdisciplinary discourse, and seven European
cultural partners: Center for the Promotion of Science (RS),
DIG gallery (SK), Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation (ES),
Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova Institute (SI), GV Art London (UK),
LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial (ES), and Science
Gallery Dublin (IE), which represent strong and diverse European
cultural and artistic positions.

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Scientific Partners

ESO—European Southern Observatory ESA—European Space Agency


Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Europe's gateway to space

CERN—the European Organization for Nuclear Research Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image Computing MEVIS

Ars Electronica Futurelab

19
European Digital Art and Science Network

Scientific Partners
and Residencies
CERN (CH)
As the cradle of the World Wide Web and
home of the Large Hadron Collider that
investigates the mysteries of our universe, the
European Organization for Nuclear Research
(CERN) is an eminent center of digital culture
as well as science and technology. As an international center of excellence in these
fields it is an inspirational place for artists and designers to explore and extend
their research in order to find new artistic approaches. home.cern
Arts@CERN is CERN’s arts program, designed to make creative connec-
tions between the worlds of science, the arts and technology. It is part of CERN’s
Cultural Policy, agreed in August 2010, which led to the creation of it flagship arts
program, Collide@CERN Artists Residencies—Creative Collisions between the
Arts and Science, in 2011. The Collide@CERN residency program is already well
established and highly regarded, with a proven track record in transdisciplinary
artistic excellence and exchange between artists and scientists. arts.cern/collide

Peter Ginter

CERN, LHC Large Hadron Collider

20
CERN: Maximilien Brice, CMS Collaboration CERN

CERN, Document Server


CERN / CMS Collaboration

One of the first collisions with “stable beam” at 13 TeV recorded by CMS.

21
Arts@CERN
The Collide Artists Residency Award is the flagship program of
Arts@CERN.
Ariane Koek (UK), an artistic director, cultural producer, cultural policy maker, and
strategist, initiated and directed the Collide@CERN program, “working with the
transdisciplinary Futurelab team at Ars, the Prix Ars Electronica Arts@CERN
Residency Award was created as part of the Collide@CERN—Creative Colli-
sions between the Arts and Science, the artists residency programme initi-
ated and created by CERN in 2010 following a 4-month feasibility study
which I carried out.” 1

AEC, rubra

Rolf-Dieter Heuer, Ariane Koek (both CERN), Gerfried Stocker, Horst Hörtner
(both Ars Electronica)

In March 2015 Mónica Bello (ES), an independent curator and art


critic with expertise in art and science became the new head of Arts@CERN.
She served as a jury member for the European Digital Art and Science Network.
“For centuries science and art cast together the contour lines of our reality.
The way we comprehend our environment, the interactions with other
beings, or the understanding of the complex laws of nature, constitute the
common drives of art and science through human history. At the current
moment, there is a major interest in exploring these hybrid cultures where
these two domains of knowledge collide. Today it is possible to imagine a
place where artists and scientists can meet and influence each other by
using formal strategies and universal imperatives. Far from commenting
on scientific facts, illustrating science or communicating advanced
technologies, art provides a framework for discussing the complexities
that underlie our contemporary scientific culture“.2

22
Rolf-Dieter Heuer (DE), a particle physicist, was director general
of CERN between 2009 and 2015: “When we launched the Arts@CERN
programme little did I know that it would enjoy the
great success that it has. In large part, that is due to
the partnership we have enjoyed with Ars Elec-
tronica, and the quality of the artists who have held
the Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN. CERN’s
decision to engage with the arts comes down to a
deep-seated conviction that art and science form
two aspects of a single culture. The level of heated
debate about the so-called ‘Two Cultures’ is a
AEC, rubra

constant source of bafflement to me. Of course arts


and science are linked. Both are about creativity.
Both require technical mastery. And both are about exploring the limits
of human potential. That’s why the motto of the Arts@CERN programme
is ‘Great art for great science’.” 3

Michael Doser (AT/CH) served several times as a


jury member for Prix Ars Electronica‘s [next idea] category,
Collide@CERN Residency Award, and European Digital Art
and Science Network and has been working for CERN since
1991, where he is deputy department head of CERN’s
physics department. He has been working with antimatter
since 1983, using it both as a tool and as an object of study,
with the goal of understanding the first moments of the

AEC, rubra
universe. In 2002, he was part of the team that made
cold atoms of anti-hydrogen for the first time, and he
currently leads the Aegis experiment to measure the effect
of gravitation of antimatter. He is the author of more than 250 publications related
to his work and to the Aegis experiment. He is a CERN Cultural Board Member.

1 TOTAL RECALL, The Evolution of Memory, Ars Electronica 2013, Hatje Cantz, 2013, p. 307
2 POST CITY – Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz, 2015, p. 181
3 POST CITY – Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz, 2015, p. 181

23
European Digital Art and Science Network
Artist Residency at CERN

In 2015, the long-term collaboration of Ars Electronica and CERN


became part of the European Digital Art and Science Network and was renamed the
Collide@CERN Ars Electronica Award. The open call for this award was the great
opportunity to realize a new science-inspired project in a fully funded residency for
up to two months at CERN, in Geneva, and one month at Ars Electronica Futurelab
in Linz.

In early July 2015, the Collide@CERN Ars Electronica Award jury, formed
by Monica Bello, Michael Doser (both CERN), Horst Hörtner, Gerfried Stocker (both
Ars Electronica), and Mike Stubbs (Fact), met in Linz. A good range of 161 projects
from 53 countries was reviewed by the jury, leading to a great debate, discussing
what was of value and who would gain most from the opportunity offered by the
Collide@CERN Ars Electronica award.

”The winning artists, the British artist duo Semiconductor, demonstrated in


previous projects a broad sense of speculation, complexity and wonder,
using strategies of analysis and translation of the phenomena into tangible
and often beautiful forms. Semiconductor has a long track record of scientific
research and previous collaboration with research institutes, e.g. NASA Space
Sciences Laboratory in California and the Smithsonian Museum of Natural
History. Semiconductor embraces processes that remind us of how our expe-
rience of science is framed by tools and artifacts. Their work brings together
a deep understanding of materiality, data, and models of natural environ-
ments and phenomena. We believe that they will be greatly inspired by their
time at CERN and the fundamental physics research being carried out there,
and that similarly they will have an impact on the researchers working in the
laboratory. In the proposal for their project A particular kind of conversation
they express a specific interest in exploring quantum phenomena and the
subjects of theoretical and experimental practice as carried out at CERN. We
foresee multiple outcomes in a variety of media, which we hope will greatly
impact the practice and the legacy of science-inspired art.“
Statement of the Jury

24
Julian Calo

In fall 2015, the English artist duo started their two-month residency at CERN.
During their residency, Jarman and Gerhardt aimed to create a digital artwork
elaborating on the nature of the world and our perception of it, including consider-
ation of how scientific instruments and particle physics discoveries influence our
perception of nature.

CERN: A Journey Through the World of Science


Text by Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt, Semiconductor

We’re in the middle of an intensive journey at CERN, meeting many brilliant


minds and bearing witness to incredible dedication, precision and openness at
the boundaries of human endeavour. Our time here is precious and we have
been cramming in all sorts of visits, meetings and interviews, to see where we
may end up.
Much of our time has been taken up talking to theorists and then re-visiting these
recorded conversations, not to necessarily learn about particle physics, although
that’s a nice by-product, but to get a sense of what it is as a language, how the
scientists talk about what they do, what it sounds like and how it functions. These
talks are really leading the ideas we’re developing.
We normally find ourselves looking towards the technology to reveal something
about matter that exists beyond our everyday perceptions, but here, it is coming
from the theorists. They describe things about the quantum world that shatter our
illusions of reality.
We have come to realise that the theorists have access to a kind of extended reality
through the models they make and the mathematics they use.

25
AEC, Claudia Schnugg
Pictures and illustrations help them, together with CERN physiscist Peter Jenni, to catch a
glimpse of what CERN’s aims are.

AEC, Claudia Schnugg


Yes, they do have blackboards at CERN and Michael Doser, expert in Elementary Particle
cosmologist Daniel Figueroa uses them to Physics at CERN, gives an overview to this
illustrate what he is talking about. subject matter.

We’re interested in continuing this journey and exploring theoretical physics


signature on the matter being studied, but at the moment we’re struggling with
what is real. Beyond the complexities of the quantum we’ve been delving into
other areas of CERN—of which there are many.
Semiconductor

The Antimatter factory belongs to one of the Every piece has a number at CERN—and a
first impressions that Semiconductor had purpose.
during their introduction visit at CERN in
October 2015.

26
We’re interested in exploring how we experience the material nature of particle
physics through the lens of science and technology, and this has meant trying
to get to the bottom of what the experiments are capturing, how they do it,
the materials involved in making it happen, how the data is captured, how it is
analysed…

One of the amazing things about CERN is its intriguing history, nearly all
these things have been developed on site, and you can often find the people
responsible, ready and willing to share their story.
Semiconductor

Luis Alvarez-Gaume is the scientific partner at CERN for the artists.

It is a unique hermetic environment that makes for a positive model of people


working together to achieve remarkable things. We have been talking to
experimenters, software developers, hardware manufacturers, programmers,
magnet experts, archivists and visiting workshops, anti-matter factories,
control rooms, magnet facilities and networks of tunnels.
Semiconductor

Discovering the small pieces of the universe.

27
We have also begun to film some of the processes we have been observing and are
experimenting with ways to visually explore CERNs unique language of science.
Source: www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2015/08/13/semiconductor/

Semiconductor

Some of the most exciting treasures are locked in the archives of CERN. Joe Gerhardt and CERN
archivist Anita are checking out Bubble Chamber films.

28
As a result of their residency at CERN and Futurelab, Semiconductor presented
their work in the framework of the Elements of Art and Science Exhibition at Ars
Electronica Festival 2015.

Semiconductor (UK)
A particular kind of conversation

In their art works, the artist duo Semiconductor explores the fundamental
material nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of science
and technology, investigating how devices mediate our experiences of nature
and position man as an observer of the physical world. They combine methods of
filming, animation, sound and dialogue, and re-working and combining actual
elements of the scientific language of particle physics (verbal, visual, aural,
echnological…) into new forms.

Semiconductor is the UK artist duo Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. In their artworks they explore
the material nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of science and
technology, questioning how they mediate our experiences. Their unique approach has been
singled out for recognition with numerous honors and grants. In 2012, they received the Samsung
Art+ Prize for new media art, a Smithsonian artist research grant, and a NASA space exploration
grant. They have exhibited and screened their works at the House of Electronic Arts in Basel,
FACT in Liverpool, the ArtScience Museum in Singapore, the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, the Royal Academy of Arts in London, the Sundance Film Festival in Utah, and at the Rotterdam
Film Festival. Their works Magnetic Movie and Brilliant Noise are in the permanent collection of
the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington DC and the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

29
ESO – The European Southern Observatory
ESO – The European Southern Observatory (CL) is an
intergovernmental organization that has its headquarters
in Munich and its observing facilities in Chile. Founded in
1962, today ESO consists of many different observation
facilities that helped make a lot of important discoveries in
astronomy. ESO has built and operated some of the largest
and most technologically advanced telescopes in the world.
www.eso.org/public

VLT in Paranal

30
That’s how the European
Extremely Large Telescope
(E-ELT) will look.
ESO/L. Calçada
Salgado josefrancisco.org

AEC, Claudia Schnugg


ESO/José Francisco

La Silla Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter


Array (ALMA)

Fernando Comerón, Head of the ESO Representation in Chile: ”The residencies


at the ESO facilities in Chile, which started in 2015, have given artists the
opportunity to visit the observatory of La Silla, the Very Large Telescope
(VLT) at Paranal Observatory, and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submilli-
meter Array (ALMA) on the Chajnantor plain. They also have allowed them
to interact with scientists and engineers who work there or who use them
for their research projects. The residencies and the works that they inspire
provide an example of the strong appeal these special places have not only
on the scientists for whom they were built but also on artists, for whom the
giant telescopes of the VLT or the antennas of the ALMA acquire a meaning
of their own. For the ESO and its personnel working at the observatories,
the presence of artists enables a particular dialog where a fresh and
enriching perspective is gained, bringing home the fact that science
does not talk only to scientists, and that can sometimes reveal unexpected
common ground.“ 1

Fernando Comerón (CL), PhD, was appointed as head of the ESO


Representation in Chile in 2013. Previous to this he was involved in
observatory operations for over 15 years and was head of ESO Data
Management and Operations Division, located in Garching near Munich.
His research interests are in star formation, galactic structure, and young
stellar objects at both high and low masses, fields in which he has
ESO/Y. Beletsky

published over 80 papers in international refereed journals. He was a


member of the Jury for the Digital Art and Science Network several times.

1 RADICAL ATOMS and the alchemists of our time, Ars Electronica 2016, Hatje Cantz, p. 159

31
European Digital Art and Science Network
Artist Residency at ESO

The first art and science residency at ESO went to María Ignacia Edwards from
Chile. She was selected from among the 140+ applicants from 40 countries who
responded to the open call. The decision was reached by a 10-member jury made
up of representatives of Ars Electronica, the European Southern Observatory and
the seven cultural partner institutions that make up the Art and Science Network.
The artist spent the residency at the European Southern Observatory in Chile and
subsequently at Ars Electronica Futurelab in Austria.

The jury deliberation took place from 23. – 25.02.2015 in Linz at the Ars Electronica
Center. Jury members Gerfried Stocker, Horst Hörtner (both Ars Electronica),
Fernando Comerón (ESO), Slobodan Coba Jovanović (Center for the Promotion of
Science), Richard Kitta (DIG gallery), Robert Devčić (GV Art London), Jurij Krpan
(Kapelica Gallery), Lucía García Rodríguez (LABoral), Diane Mc’Sweeney (Science
Gallery Dublin), José Carlos Arnal, Fermín Serrano Sanz (both Zaragoza Foundation)
issued the following statement: “The artist works with space, endeavouring to
maintain the balance, suspension, lightness, and weightlessness of objects,
which are sustained by their own weight and counterweight. The construc-
tions are the result of exquisite prior calculations, mechanisms, solutions, and
interventions. María Ignacia Edwards calls these pieces self-sustainable
because they require no more than their own weight to exist, and the objects
tend to rotate constantly around their own axis. The artist invites beholders
to observe each object as if they were stars in the firmament. While, at first
sight, her approach might seem purely plastic, it transcends science and
particularly physics and mathematics, and in the jury’s view, it is especially
attractive for the potential it offers for the residency. The artist makes a
great effort to connect both the inspiration and the outcome of the work to
characteristic features of astronomy: isolated objects in weightlessness. The
work is thus intended to evoke astronomy-inspired awe. The presentation is
very well elaborated and clearly transmits the idea of the project, though it
also promises great potential for development in both residency venues.”
Statement of the Jury

32
María Ignacia Edwards
Art and Science: A Cosmic Inspiration

AEC, Claudia Schnugg


Together with Fernando Comerón, the optical instrument. It consists of four unit
ESO’s representative in Chile, and telescopes with main mirrors 8.2 meters in
Claudia Schnugg, the artist’s mentor at diameter that can be operated individually
the Ars Electronica Futurelab, María or can work together to form a giant
Ignacia Edwards took an inspection tour interferometer.
through Chile in mid-May 2015. The aim Here, the staff gathers data that’s indispen-
of her first journey of inspiration was to sible to scientific research on the cosmos.
reconnoiter potential locations for her Scientists from all over the world gather in
residency in Chile and to get to know the Paranal. Each is the lucky recipient of one
scientists and technicians working there of the precious positions on the staff of
as well as the technology behind this this high-tech data production machine.
huge endeavor. Garnering “observing time” is no simple
The “big sky country” of the Atacama matter, but the potential rewards are
Desert about a one-hour drive from tremendous. For example, the oldest star
Antofagasta in northern Chile is the in our Milky Way galaxy was identified
home of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) with the help of the VLT. And it also took
and an especially wonderful spot from the first picture of a planet outside our
which to peer into outer space. The VLT solar system.
in Paranal is the world’s most advanced

33
AEC, Claudia Schnugg
María Ignacia Edwards visited ALMA, the “ALMA inspires me: There is the power
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter of the desert, the sun, and the illusion
Array. At 5,000 meters above sea level, the
of understanding and witnessing the
world’s largest radio telescope has 66
antennas spread out across this arid expanse mechanism in action with all those
to scan the sky in all directions. antennas moving at once… the harmony
in the accuracy of the movement, which
is one of the essential elements that
inspire my work.”

In the 1960s ESO built the first observatory La “The visit to La Silla was overwhelming,
Silla. This facility includes several telescopes, I found a place that seems suspended in
which are operated by ESO as well as other
time and over the clouds, with the beauty
institutions.
and the weight of past time on things, it
touched me deeply. I could feel a nostalgia
and melancholy for what it used to be and
that somehow still is, moving at its own
time and rhythm. A place apparently full
of stories.”

34
The artist spent a few weeks at the scientific institution and derived inspiration
from her mentors and their scientific work. Subsequently, she spent an additional
residency at Ars Electronica Futurelab, where mentors assisted the artist in
the creation and development of new works that were inspired by her previous
residency at ESO.
ESO; AEC Claudia Schnugg

AEC, Magdalena Sick-Leitner

María Ignacia Edwards and Stefan Mittlböck-Jungwirth-Fohringer at Ars Electronica


Futurelab building the swing.

35
AEC, Tom Mesic
The outcome of the residency, Encounters, was then showcased as part of the
Elements of Art and Science exhibition that premiered at the 2015 Ars Electronica
Festival. María Ignacia Edwards conceived her work in such a way that the main
portion of the project remained in Linz and other parts could be presented at the
other European Art and Science Network member institutions.
Text: Claudia Schnugg, Martin Hieslmair/Ars Electronica
www.aec.at/feature/de/cosmic-inspiration

AEC, Martin Hieslmair

36
AEC, Tom Mesic
María Ignacia Edwards
Encounters for Mobile Instrument of String and Air
María Ignacia Edwards works with equilibrium, lightness, and weightlessness
of objects that she brings into balance by deploying their own weight or
counterweights. Though, at first glance, her works are perceived as purely
aesthetic, artistic objects, it soon dawns on those who behold them that
these constructions are the result of elaborate mathematical and physical
calculations. Based on her experience at the ESO observatories La Silla and
ALMA, María created a Mobile Instrument that is able to capture the
movement of pieces located at distant places by a mechanism as a reference
to time and the motion of the universe.

María Ignacia Edwards (CL), born 1982, is an artist from Santiago, Chile. After getting her Arts
bachelor degree from Finis Terrae University in Santiago and her Diploma in Cinema, Art
Direction and Photography from the University of Chile, she lived and worked in New York City
from 2009 to 2012. During this time she also did an artistic residency at the School of Visual
Arts and in the Lower East Side Printshop. In 2012, she received an invitation from the Arts
Cultural Center in Mexico, Reinosa/Tamaulipas, to perform an individual exhibition, In Between,
within the Tamaulipas International Arts Festival. The artworks of María Edwards were also
exhibited in Chile, Spain, USA, Argentina, Peru, and Mexico. She has participated in
international fairs: Pinta Art Fair in New York, ArteBA in Buenos Aires, Art Lima in Peru, and
ChaCo in Chile. She was awarded the honor prize Art for Science, granted by the National
Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT) in Santiago, Chile. María I.
Edwards was the first artist in residency in the framework of the European Art and Science
Network. www.aec.at/artandscience

37
European Digital Art and Science Network
Artist Residency at ESO
Following María Ignacia Edwards’ residency at ESO in 2015, the members of the
Quadrature artists’ collective, Jan Bernstein, Juliane Götz, and Sebastian Neitsch
(all DE), were the next recipients of the European Digital Art and Science Network
residency at the European Southern Observatory in 2016.

AEC, Claudia Schnugg


After 2 days of Jury deliberations (22. – 23.02.2016) the members of the jury,
Gerfried Stocker, Horst Hörtner, Martin Honzik (all Ars Electronica), Slobodan
Coba Jovanovic (CPN), Richard Kitta (DIG gallery), Fernando Comerón (ESO),
Robert Devčić (GV Art London), Jurij Krpan (Kapelica Gallery), Lucía García
Rodríguez (LABoral), Lynn Scarff (Science Gallery Dublin), and Fermin Serrano
Sanz (Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation) issued the following statement:
“Quadrature are not new to the exploration of space; their previous work has
tracked the movement of the Voyager space probe and given it a physical,
kinetic manifestation here on Earth. This making the unseen visible was an
exciting proposition of their proposal for the ESO residency. As a collective,
their practice is already embedded in the processes of collaborative practice
that are critical to the success of an art science residency of this nature. Their
proposal addressed questions around how their work would develop and
manifest in a physical exhibition space like Ars Electronica and offer a
compelling experience to visitors, enabling them to sense the unseen, to
AEC, Claudia Schnugg

momentarily lift off and experience deep space. Their intimate knowledge
of the constraints and possibilities of the technology at ESO demonstrated
a body of knowledge and work that sets the scene for exciting outputs. In
summary, the members of the jury are assured that Quadrature’s residency at
the ESO in Chile and at the Ars Electronica Futurelab in Linz has significant
artistic potential and innovation within the art science space.”
Statement of the Jury

38
Quadrature
A Trip Close to Outer Space

In 2013, Jan Bernstein, Juliane Götz, and Sebastian Neitsch, who met at art school
founded the artists collective Quadrature in which each of them contributes
his/her own skills and focal-point topics. The artists, not only bring to the table
tremendous interest in and prior knowledge about ESO’s locations in Chile;
two of their previous projects—Voyager and Satellites—dealt with very similar
topics. Finally in late May 2016 they departed for Chile to get a close-up look at
the European Southern Observatory’s locations there and get acquainted
with scientists on site. As Sebastian Neitsch put it “We won’t soon be taking
another trip so close to outer space!”
Sebastian Neitsch

The first stop on the itinerary was ESO’s headquarters in Santiago, where the
artists had their first meeting with the organization’s scientists and astronomers.
After this round of socializing with lots of new names and faces, things calmed
down considerably and the artists
headed into the huge expanses of the
desert landscape. On the access road
to Cerro Paranal, a mountain about 12
kilometers from the Chilean coast, a
sense of joyful anticipation took hold
of them. The Paranal Observatory is
perched at an altitude of about 2,600
meters above sea level; its telescopes
are visible from afar.

39
AEC, Claudia Schnugg
Just like its bigger associates, the little UT5’s roof slides back to let you get a good look into
the endless expanses of the cosmos.

Four huge telescopes are ensconced in Quadrature at the VLT platform: Fernando
Paranal. They’re named Antu, Kueyen, Comerón personally explains to the three
Melipal and Yepun, and are so-called unit artists how the VLT works, how the giant
telescopes (UT1 to UT4) that make up telescope can rotate, what calibrations
ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT). are necessary, and the functions of the
reflectors and lasers.

40
Sebastian Neitsch

The next stop on the tour of Paranal is ESO’s coating area, where the reflectors
used in the telescopes are recoated with aluminum.
AEC, Claudia Schnugg; Sebastian Neitsch

AEC, Claudia Schnugg

Since the reflector’s reflective coating deteriorates over time—due to oxidation or


wear and tear—these sensitive elements have to be recoated every few years.

41
At some locations in Paranal, shoes Shortly before the end of this leg of their
need to be covered up too for the protracted journey, the artists dropped in
sake of the delicate devices. on the Integration Lab, where Samuel
Leveque described tests being performed
there.

Samuel Leveque

Fernando Comerón (ESO Chile), Claudia Schnugg (Ars Electronica Futurelab),


Jan Bernstein, Juliane Götz, and Sebastian Neitsch (Quadrature)

Text: Martin Hieslmair


Source: www.aec.at/feature/de/esoexpedition

42
The next stop on Quadrature’s itinerary was Ars Electronica Futurelab in Linz,
where, in September 2016 at the Ars Electronica Festival RADICAL ATOMS and the
alchemists of our time, the audience could see what the artists’ collective had
made out of their Residency.

Quadrature (DE)
STONES
Storage Technology for Observed Nearby Extraterrestrial Shelters

Astronomical research is very much subject to the


human tendency to observe and evaluate any
findings within the context of our own culture. Yet
the truth of scientific results goes far beyond the
duration of our current civilizations. Just the
detection of exoplanets* in the habitable zone
already constitutes a scientific milestone.
Detached from any contemporary interpretation,
the work archives pure knowledge for the coming
millennia. In a notation that requires no previous
cultural education but can be deciphered based
on logic and scientific observation, the knowledge
itself is the main message.

* A planet outside our solar system, orbiting its parent star in


AEC, Tom Mesic

a particular area so that water may be present on its surface


in liquid form. This is regarded as a prerequisite for the emer-
gence of life. So far, 42 such objects have been identified.
(Source: Planetary Habitability Laboratory, UPR Arecibo.)

Quadrature (DE)
MASSES
Motors and Stones Searching for Equilibrium State

We place two stones on top of a balanced steel plate.


The aim of the machine is to position the stones so
that the system is perfectly balanced. In an incessant
process, continuous efforts repeatedly briefly avert
the constant threat of divergence, only for it to
appear elsewhere a moment later. Instead of the
desired state of well-adjusted stability, the work
achieves a permanent state of incessant motion—a
fragile but constant situation between falling and
floating. As the precision of modern research
instruments advances, so their vulnerability
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

increases, and with it the need to compensate for


even the smallest disturbing influences. Supported
by a machinery of sensors and people, the apparatus
performs an endless sequence of observation and
calibration.

43
ESA – The European Space Agency

ESA-Anneke Le Floc'h
ESTEC, aerial view

In 2016 ESA joined the project as a new scientific partner. ESA—the European
Space Agency—is Europe’s gateway to space. Its mission is to shape the develop-
ment of Europe’s space capability and ensure that investment in space continues
to deliver benefits to the citizens of Europe and the world. ESA is an international
organization with 22 Member States. ESA’s job is to draw up the European space
program and carry it through. ESA’s programs are designed to find out more about
Earth, its immediate space environment, our Solar System, and the Universe, as
well as to develop satellite-based technologies and services, and to promote
European industries. ESA also works closely with space organizations outside
Europe. www.esa.int

This residency at ESA offers artists an extraordinary opportunity to visit the


European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in Noordwijk, the
Netherlands. ESTEC, the largest of ESA’s establishments, is the incubator of the
European space effort, where most ESA projects are born and where they are
guided through the various phases of development. There, artists can view ESA's
environmental test centre for spacecraft and visit other laboratories specialised
in systems engineering, components, and materials. During the residency, artists
can get acquainted with all aspects of ESA's Space Science Programme, compris-
ing a fleet of space telescopes performing astronomical observations across the
electromagnetic spectrum and space probes exploring a variety of Solar System
bodies. The residency also offers the unique chance to experience one-of-a-kind
events, such as the arrival of the ExoMars mission at Mars, in October 2016, at
ESA's European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany.

44
The ESA Residency program is co-curated by Claudia Mignone and Karen O’Flaherty, and
was initiated by Mark McCaughrean “ … Investigating our cosmic origins is a major
theme in the Space Science Programme of the European Space Agency (ESA), which
operates a fleet of missions that allow European scientists to be at the frontier of astro-
physics, planetary science, solar and fundamental physics. It’s sometimes easy to forget,
while caught up in the daily duties of scientific research, that space science tackles
questions that spark curiosity at a deeper, more fundamentally human level. These
questions concern the very essence of our existence on this planet—not as mere
individuals but as part of a cosmic tale that started eons before us and that will continue
long after we are gone. These questions do not pertain exclusively to science, but are
central to many other domains of culture and research, and in particular to the arts.
In recent years, in our role as communicators of ESA’s Space Science Programme to
the broader public, we have met and interacted with a number of artists who had been
inspired by ESA missions, by their results, and by the vision that brought them about.
These artists wanted to learn more, to probe the scientific and technological processes
that enable the spirit of enquiry to leave Earth’s gravitational pull to research the
Universe from space. During these interactions, we appreciated the variety of
perspectives that artists have on the scientific endeavour and were intrigued by how
their curiosity is triggered by aspects that may differ from those pursued by scientists.
These perspectives often provide refreshing insights into the science of the cosmos. So
we were honoured when Ars Electronica invited ESA to join an exciting collaboration,
researching the common ground between art and space science through an artistic
residency, to be spent partly at ESA’s European Space Research and Technology
Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands, and partly with the creative team at Futurelab
in Austria. (…) 1

Mark McCaughrean (UK) works for the European Space Agency, where he is the Senior Advisor for Science
& Exploration and is active in communicating the scientific results from ESA’s astronomy, heliophysics,
planetary, and fundamental physics missions. Following his PhD from the University of Edinburgh in 1988, he
has worked in the UK, the US, Germany, and the Netherlands. His personal research involves observational
studies of the formation of stars and their planetary systems using state-of-the-art ground- and space-based
telescopes. He is an Interdisciplinary Scientist on the Science Working Group for the NASA/ESA/CSA James
Webb Space Telescope.
Claudia Mignone (IT), (Vitrociset Belgium for ESA – European Space Agency), is an astrophysicist, science
writer, and communicator. After studying Astronomy at the University of Bologna and obtaining a PhD in
Cosmology at the University of Heidelberg, she decided to embrace a full-time career in the public outreach
of science, and has been working as a science writer for ESA since 2010. Together with Karen O’Flaherty she
has served as a jury member, representing ESA, for the European Digital Art and Science Network.
Karen O’Flaherty (IE), (EJR-Quartz for ESA – European Space Agency), is a scientist, editor, and writer. A
graduate of University College Dublin, she has worked at the European Space Agency (ESA) since obtaining
her PhD in Astrophysics. During her time at ESA she has specialized in outreach to different audiences and
has been involved in many innovative communication initiatives for ESA’s science missions. She is currently
chief editor for ESA’s Science & Technology and Robotic Exploration of Mars websites. Together with Claudia
Mignone she has served as a jury member, representing ESA, for the European Digital Art and Science Network.

1 Claudia Mignone, Karen O’Flaherty, and Mark McCaughrean, “When Art and Space Science meet“
in RADICAL ATOMS and the alchemists of our time, Ars Electronica 2016, Hatje Cantz, p. 162

45
European Digital Art and Science Network
Artist Residency at the
European Space Agency

The recipient of the first art&science@ESA residency,


is Aoife van Linden Tol. Her winning proposal was
selected from 139 submitted projects by an international
jury including representatives from ESA, Ars Electronica,
and members of the European Digital Art and Science
Network.

The Jury meeting was held at Ars Electronica in Linz from 08.07. – 09.07.2016 and
the Jury included Gerfried Stocker, Horst Hörtner (both Ars Electronica), Claudia
Mignone and Karen O’Flaherty (both representing the European Space Agency),
Dobrivoje Lale Eric (Center for the Promotion of Science), Richard Kitta (DIG
gallery), Karin Ohlenschläger (LABoral), and Jurij Krpan (Kapelica Gallery). In their
statement they gave their reasons:
“Aoife van Linden Tol is a multidisciplinary artist working primarily with
explosive media and inspired by different scientific disciplines like chemistry,
physics, and cosmology. By using explosions as a creative way to explore not
only concepts of time, density, and matter but also deep human emotions,
she is able to create beautiful and poetic as well as strong and devastating
moments and experiences in art. With her project Star Storm, which tackles
the life-cycle of stars and the physical processes of stellar formation and
evolution across the Universe,
she was able to convince the
jury that she is the right artist
for this first opportunity of a
residency at the ESA’s Euro-
pean Space Research and
Technology Centre. What
impressed the jury the most
was her individual approach
in asking and exploring
fundamental questions
about our Universe”.
Statement of the Jury

46
art&science@ESA residency
For the art&science@ESA residency, Aoife proposed Star Storm, a spectacular
performance inspired by the physical processes that characterize the life of stars.
Asked to explain the connection between the theme of explosions and the Universe
in her performance, the artist explains: “From the Big Bang to solar mass
AEC, Martin Hieslmair; Aoife van Linden Tol

ejections and supernovae, the spacescape is alive with explosions. With Star
Storm I plan to use explosives to describe some of the physics of the stars
and of our Sun in particular. I have an instinct about how I will do this but
actually the design will come directly from the research at ESA. For example,
one of my interests is the journey that light and other particles from stars take
in their lifetime, traveling across the Universe and then interacting with our
atmosphere and the Earth. I wonder if I can describe this journey as one of
the performances.“

47
AEC, Florian Voggeneder
Aoife van Linden Tol experimenting at Ars Electronica Futurelab

Questioned on her plans for the residency at ESTEC and at Ars Electronica
Futurelab, Aoife van Linden Tol replied: ”ESTEC is very much about learning for
me. Absorbing information, asking lots and lots and lots of questions. I am a
little worried that I am going to drive them crazy! All the research will help to
design a new body of work including the explosive performances for Ars
Electronica 2017. Futurelab will very much be about experimenting. I will
need to test all the techniques I have designed, which is quite a process. I
would also like to discover new ways to trigger the explosions. I am very
interested in how a tipping point is reached for a reaction to start. Perhaps
the audience can create the electrical current needed for example.”¬
Source: https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2016/08/03/aoife-van-linden-tol

48
Aoife van Linden Tol (IE)
Star Storm

Star Storm, a spectacular, site-specific explosive performance inspired by the


processes of the stars, was presented at Ars Electronica Festival 2017 ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE – The Other I in Linz. Using research from the European Space
Agency on the composition, life cycle, magnetic behavior, and light production
within stars, including our Sun, the artist designed a powerful and beautifully
poetic experience. Taken on an emotional and physical journey, the audience
witnessed a series of explosive and pyrotechnic events, each of which represented
a specific phenomenon taking place every moment in stars all across the Universe.
Each section of the performance is varied and distinct—creating a wonderful
contrast of energy and experience from exciting to meditative, from durational to
instant, from order to chaos, reflecting the Universe we live in and the discoveries
we have made about it. The work incorporates cutting-edge technology, allowing
the audience to trigger the electrical charge needed to initiate the explosive chain
reaction, highlighting the tipping point at which equilibrium is instantaneously and
irreversibly transformed. Star Storm aims to create a unique and lasting experience
which gives audiences insights into the very nature of our universe and their own
place within it.

Aoife van Linden Tol (IE). Beginning in 2000, Aoife van Linden Tol’s work with explosives fused
her interests in nature, cosmology, chemistry, and physics. A multi-disciplinary artist, her
practice spans sculpture, installation, drawing, photography, film, and performance. She creates
abstract works that often examine concepts of time, density, and matter as well as deep human
emotions and motivations. She has exhibited internationally including at the ICA, London, the
San Francisco MOMA, and the NGBK Berlin. Aoife has recently worked with Imperial College
London, researching light spectra for a series in neon, and was invited by Disney to design a
limited edition model Star Wars BB-8 robot that was auctioned by Force for Change charity,
benefiting Great Ormond Street Hospital, London.

49
European Digital Art and Science Network
Artist Residency at Fraunhofer MEVIS

Embedded in a worldwide network of clinical and academic partners, Fraunhofer


MEVIS develops real-world software solutions for image-supported early detection,
diagnosis, and therapy. Strong focus is placed on cancer as well as diseases of the
circulatory system, brain, breast, liver, and lung. The goal is to detect diseases
earlier and more reliably, tailor treatments to each individual, and make therapeutic
success more measurable. In addition, Fraunhofer MEVIS is committed to raising
awareness about how computerization influences health care and to inspiring the
young to consider career pathways in science by showing new ideas, approaches,
and possibilities that emerge from innovative R&D. The aim is to foster the engage-
ment with, and ownership of future technology. www.mevis.fraunhofer.de

Fraunhofer MEVIS and Ars Electronica established an artist-in-residency program in


conjunction with the European Digital Art and Science Network. Bianka Hofmann,
Head of Corporate Communication at Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image
Computing MEVIS, explains the potential she sees in connecting art and science:
”We need a new avant-garde that feeds on the fusion of natural and social
sciences, technology and art, and develops societal utopias—neither dystopias
nor promises of technological salvation. People cannot comprehend or
constructively deal with complex questions in 20-minute presentations or 140
characters. Expert knowledge, time, devotion, and understanding are needed.
What we are capable of though is socially and accessibly incorporating and
acknowledging this expertise as well as possible. Nerdy is the new awesome!
Media-cultural developments such as the sitcom Silicon Valley are just one
expression of this. Research, development, and art do not exist in a societal
vacuum, and are usually not devised by isolated geniuses. What ideas for the
future, sustainable beyond our own lifetime, do we want to carry forward?
How do we want to talk about new possibilities in medical technology and
describe their development? Every view of the world, including the scientific
view, is also a choice of perspective, a specific door to enter. Remembering or
even realizing this is an important step towards acknowledging and exploring
other perspectives such as art.” 1

Bianka Hofmann (DE) inspires people with new ideas in science, research, and art and the possible
impacts of future technology. To encourage people to engage with and create their own experiences,
she focuses on innovative communication concepts. She works at the Fraunhofer Institute for Medical
Image Computing MEVIS, where she developed the institute’s strategic press and media work and
science communication and is now the Head of Corporate Communication. Before she worked at the
University of Bremen on transferring new knowledge from the universities into schools. She studied
Comparative Religion and Biology and is a qualified communication coach.

1 Source: https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2017/01/30/steam-imaging
Bianka Hofmann in an interview with Martin Hieslmair, Ars Electronica, March 1, 2017

50
STEAM Imaging
An artist-in-residency program focusing on links
between art and science

The Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image Computing MEVIS has established an
exciting artist-in-residency program that focuses on links between art and science.
It is also integrating pupils into this experiment. Educators have been aware of
the need to promote the STEM subjects Science, Technology, Engineering, and
Mathematicsfor decades now, and measures have been prescribed for elementary
school classroom instruction in order to ensure an early start and pave the way to
an innovative society.
In the meantime, the acronym has acquired an additional letter. The “A” that now
makes STEAM stands for Arts. Accordingly, Fraunhofer MEVIS has launched STEAM
Imaging, which gives an artist the opportunity to spend a residency of several
weeks working closely together with staff researchers at Fraunhofer MEVIS in
Bremen, Germany, and co-developed and held a STEAM workshop for pupils.
Then, she spent several weeks at Ars Electronica, Linz, which hosted another
STEAM workshop. The artistic outcome of these encounters was presented at
Ars Electronica Festival, September 2017 in Linz within the framework of the
European Digital Art and Science Network.

51
Yen Tzu Chang (TW), the recipient of the residency STEAM Imaging, jointly hosted by
Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image Computing (MEVIS) and Ars Electronica, had
the unique opportunity to work closely together with the Institute’s research staff.
The Taiwanese media artist, whose previous works have included experimental sound
performances, specializes in creating customized electronic instruments. Yen Tzu
Chang also agreed, together with the scientists, to lead workshops for pupils in the
7 th to 9 th grades in Bremen and Linz in cooperation with the International Fraunhofer
Talent School Bremen in March and June 2017. Following her residency, the outcome
of this encounter of art and science in the field of medical imaging, Whose scalpel,
was featured at Ars Electronica Festival ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE – The Other I in
September 2017.
https://www.aec.at/artandscience/en/artists/yen-tzu-chang

AEC, Martin Hieslmair

Hands-on projects for the next generation that focus on STEM topics as mathematics,
informatics, and physics have a long tradition at Fraunhofer MEVIS. By expanding the proven
workshop practices to an artistic level Fraunhofer MEVIS enters new territory. STEAM Imaging
includes the explicit assignment for the artist to carry out school workshops. The Taiwanese
artist Yen Tzu Chang working with young students.

52
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Yen Tzu Chang


Whose scalpel
Whose scalpel is a sound performance combined with visual and 3D printed
installation, realized with an application framework for medical image processing.
Mixing several methods from art and science, it is an imagination of the future and
presents the issues of the relationship between human and machine during heart
surgery. The concept is developed from three different areas—the application of
sound in medical science, coronary artery bypass surgery, and machine learning.
The background story of the performance is based on the assumption that in the
near future a surgeon works with the machine that can give advice during surgery.
Sound is chosen as the media of the performance because it helps to create a
scene and atmosphere. On the other hand, sound plays an important role in
medicine. For instance, it is well known that the heart pumps blood through the
whole human body with a regular frequency, which can be used to help diagnosis.
Another famous application of sound in medicine is the stethoscope, which was

53
invented in the 19 th century for auscultation and allows listening to the internal
sound of organs in the chest such as lungs and heart. Another state of the art
example is the video from the Fraunhofer MEVIS YouTube channel, Auditory
guidance prototype for navigated liver surgery 1. The video shows that if the scalpel
deviates from the correct cutting path, the device will make a different sound to
notify the surgeon.
The heart as one of the most important human organs—both from the perspective
of biology or symbolism in the societyis the focus of the surgery. The heart is an
installation, which is built according to the performer’s real heart from MRI scans,
but is larger than its actual size. It is printed out by a 3D printer and surrounded by
aluminum structures. To make the heart installation like a musical instrument, the
inner part of it is equipped with Arduino, LED, and electronic components and the
surface is covered with silicon and transparent vessels. It is designed to interact
when the performer plugs in audio cables and bridges connections, similar to the
method of coronary artery bypass surgery. Coronary artery bypass surgery is a
type of heart surgery used for treating coronary artery disease, caused by the inner
wall of arteries becoming blocked by fat. To supply enough oxygenated blood to
the heart muscle, the doctor takes the blood vessels (or grafts) from the patient's
leg, chest, or wrist and places it above and below the end of the blocked area so
that the blood can go through the new grafts to reach the heart muscle.2 This
method enables blood to flow through the new path, and it is a similar approach
with operating a modular synthesizer to some extent, which is about letting the
signal go through one modular to the other to produce the sound. In the heart
installation, plugging in the cables, as a similar act, triggers the sound from Pure
Data.
The AI is another character in the performance. It is created according to the
technology trend. Since Alan Turing, an English computer scientist, submitted his
article “Computing Machinery and Intelligence,”3 a new era began and the ques-
tion: “Can machines think?” was raised. One large topic in artificial intelligence is
machine learning, which, according to American pioneer Arthur Samuel means,
“giving computers the ability to learn without being explicitly programmed”.4 The
theory of it is, by designing algorithms to analyze portions of data, insights may
be discovered and predictions may be made. Machine learning has been applied
in many fields. In the medical field, machine learning is applied in diagnosis.
According to Fraunhofer’s 2016 press publication, it can help physicians to
distinguish tumors from CT and MRI scans.5

54
In the performance, an artistically imagined AI will be in charge of more important
medical tasks such as analyzing the patient’s body condition and giving doctors
suggestions with sound and visuals in future surgery. The storyline is led by the
sound and the mixed video of medical images and live performance from the
webcam. The goal of the performer as a surgeon during surgery is to cure the
heart, which symbolizes human consciousness and faith. The AI, which is regarded
as a perfect model, gives instruction to the performer. Maybe the question “If
machines can reason even better than humans, will we as humans lose some
abilities and not even believe ourselves anymore?” is worth thinking about since
the issue is already present.

1 Christian Hansen, David Black, Christoph Lange, Fabian Rieber, Wolfram Lamadé,
Marchello Donati, Karl J. Oldhafer, and Horst K. Hahn. Auditory guidance prototype for
navigated liver surgery. Computer Support for Image-Based Medicine, Fraunhofer Institute
for Medical Image Computing MEVIS. URL: https://youtu.be/gCg5nJSI2pY
[accessed 2017-02-07].
2 Johns Hopkins Medicine, Health Library, Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery.
URL: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/healthlibrary/test_procedures/cardiovascular/
coronary_artery_bypass_graft_surgery_cabg_92,P07967/ [accessed 2017-07-02].
3 Turing, Alan M. “Computing machinery and intelligence.” Mind 59.236 (1950): 433-460.
4 Munoz, Andres. “Machine Learning and Optimization.”
URL: https://www. cims. nyu. edu/~ munoz/files/ml_optimization. Pdf
[accessed 2016-03-02][WebCite Cache ID 6fiLfZvnG] (2014).
5 Fraunhofer. Machine learning to help physicians. URL: https://www.fraunhofer.de/en/press/
research-news/2016/november/machine-learning-to-help-physicians.html
[accessed 2017-07-02].

Yen Tzu Chang (TW) is a Taiwanese media artist who has lived and studied in Linz, Austria since
2014. She has a BA from the new media art department at Taipei National University of Art. Since
2011, she has been working in various fields, including interdisciplinary art and experimental
performances based on sound installation. Her early works were audio-visual and installation mixed
with video art. One kind of language… was like a science video about an incredibly long millipede
walking through two screens. She gradually became interested in making installations, which
combine her experience on stage. She began to develop her own electronic instruments. The
Time Travel and Self-luminous series are the most successful light installations in her art career.

55
Andreas J. Hirsch

The Practice
of Art
and Science
Experiences and Lessons
from the European Digital Art
and Science Network

56
I. ENTERING
NEW GROUND
Building an Extraordinary Network
for Art and Science Encounters

Encounters of art and science, or, more precisely, of artists and


scientists, have enjoyed rapidly growing interest and attention in recent years.
The romance of art and science has a long history, albeit a mixed one. Leonardo
da Vinci (1452–1519), the artist and polymath active in the Florence of the
Renaissance, still serves as the prominent example for the enormous creative
potential flowing from the interactions of art and science. Since then science
has been splitting up into numerous paths of ever deeper specialization, seeking
knowledge within reductionist paradigms, and has largely abandoned free
science in favor of research inside large organizations able to afford and maintain
the ever larger and more refined instruments needed for it. Art—at the price of
the mainly precarious existence of many artists—still offers more degrees of
freedom, but the system of art displays its various agents like art institutions,
curators, universities, galleries, critics, and the artists fighting for survival in an
ever more pressurized and economy-driven environment.

What has also emerged since the days of Leonardo is—due to the
advent of Modern Science and the Industrial Age1—this opposition of the distinct,
seemingly incompatible roles of the artist and the scientist, which turned the
figure of the polymath into more of an element of mythology. Mathematics
having become the lingua franca of most of the sciences has added an almost
impenetrable language barrier to this scenario. So the preconditions for seeking
anew the encounter of art and science would—at first glance—seem not too
good. But from the seedbed of mathematics sprang a universal tool, which
quickly became the key instrument used by scientists and artists alike—the digital
computer. This tool, together with ubiquitous communication networks and the
internet as a medium of collaboration, prepared the ground for new encounters.

57
The Prologue for a New Phase
in Encounters of Art and Science
As this new digital world was about to unfold, a new kind of artist
started to appear on the scene, who worked with all kinds of media, even before
they turned digital. In this emerging field of media art an institution of a new
kind—bearing a name that seemed to reference back in history even further
than the Renaissance—came to life in 1979: Ars Electronica. From its visionary
inception onwards, Ars Electronica contributed at the nexus of art, technology
and society to what would then turn into a Digital Revolution, and kept reflecting
its impact on society. Over the years the list of topics embraced and challenged
by Ars Electronica included an increasing number of new sciences and the
corresponding new fields of artistic creation like Nanotech, Bio-Art, etc. The
expertise from this long track record of Ars Electronica’s work with scientists
active in those new disciplines and with artists pioneering new artforms helped
prepare for the logical next steps in the encounter of art and science.

Since its very foundation in 1996, Ars Electronica Futurelab—the


research arm of Ars Electronica—has been receiving guest artists as well as guest
researchers, a practice that in the following years developed into the more formal
format of the Ars Electronica Residency Network. With the category �the next idea�2
in 2009, a new selection modality—through a competition and an international
jury—for winning residencies at Ars Electronica Futurelab was implemented. Prix
Ars Electronica—the international award for media and digital art introduced in
1987—has been constantly evolving its pattern of artistic categories in line with
the latest developments in art, technology and society. In 2007 the category
Hybrid Art was added, which is specifically dedicated to transdisciplinary
projects and “transcending the boundaries between art and research.”3 So
through the different activities of Ars Electronica, the ground was prepared,
a rich body of experience accumulated, and far reaching international networks
woven that would prove valuable when bringing the encounters of art and
science to the next level.

Each emerging new development—be it in art, science, technology or


in societies—has its driving forces behind it. Large-scale structural change results
in new forms of art, breakthroughs in discovery, the introduction of new media,
or different conditions and modalities of living together. But all such development
also has its midwives, people who turn out to be the right person in a key position
at a crucial time. So the development that led up to the European Digital Art and
Science Network was also influenced and driven by a number of individuals with
the vision and the persistence to create new forms of encounters of art and
science. They came from all different areas of expertise involved: artists, curators,
and scientists.

58
“You have to find the institutions and the
people who are interested in this kind of exchange.
The excitement is then primarily about the joy of
collaboration and exchange.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica4

The media artist Gerfried Stocker, born 1964 in Austria, became


artistic director of Ars Electronica in 1995. Under his direction, the new Ars
Electronica Center as a space for presentation and interaction was opened in
1996 and expanded in 2009. In his strictly interdisciplinary work he combines
an engineering background with artistic curation and strategic vision. Designing
the annual topics of Ars Electronica Festival means preparing the “proving
ground” for new artistic tendencies, emerging technological trends, and seismic
shifts in societies. This includes detecting metatrends like the one that flowed
into the theme of the 2005 Ars Electronica Festival, HYBRID—living in paradox,
and the creation of the already mentioned Prix Ars Electronica category Hybrid
Art. Stocker is also the chief architect of the European Digital Art and Science
Network.

“If science gets accessible, it will most likely


be through the arts.”
Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab5

An expert in human computer interaction, the media artist and


researcher Horst Hörtner—born 1965 in Austria—is a founding member and
the director of Ars Electronica Futurelab since 1996. The Futurelab comprises
constant evolvement and renewal in its genetic code and nurtures a culture of
embracing new perspectives coming into the lab through new members of
its team as well as visiting artists and researchers. One of its more recent
developments under Hörtner’s lead is the project Spaxels, Pixels in Space,
a spatial display that shows signs of becoming a new medium of expression.

“The central goal is to actively work on


blurring the dividing line of the ‘Two Cultures’ and
help usher in a new culture that is overdue—a culture
of creative thinkers from the arts and sciences who
join together to combine their knowledge and skills
to come up with innovations, collaborations and most
of all, new ways to help heal this planet.”
Victoria Vesna, UCLA Art|Sci Center6

59
In developing and directing the Art|Sci Program at UCLA in California
since 2005 and numerous interdisciplinary programs that preceded it, the artist,
curator, and academic teacher Victoria Vesna, born 1959 in the US, has
become one of the experts in the encounters of art and science. In her work
she strongly advocated for the opening of mindsets in an academic context
and facilitating exchange between the disciplines. This led also to her long
lasting cooperation with Ars Electronica, including speaking at the 1997 Festival,
FleshFactor, and her work as juror of the Hybrid Art category and moderator of
the Prix Forum for Hybrid Art.

“Being attracted by the ultimate questions—


who we are, where we come from, and where we are
going as humankind, artists and scientists are sharing
the same field of metaphysical interest, but the ways
they approach these ultimate questions are
intrinsically different.”
Jurij Krpan, Kapelica Gallery7

For more than 20 years a gallery in Slovenia has been a hot spot for
media art and a platform for different forms of transdisciplinary exchange.
The founder of Kapelica Gallery for Contemporary Investigative Arts in Ljubljana
and its director since 1995, curator Jurij Krpan, born 1961, has been doing
pioneering work in the field of art and science. For Ars Electronica Festival in
2008 he curated the Featured Art Scene exhibition at LENTOS Art Museum,
presenting the lively Art & Science Scene from Slovenia. He repeatedly served as
juror for the Hybrid Art category of Prix Ars Electronica, and Kapelica Gallery has
become an important partner of Ars Electronica in networking projects in a
European context.

”As more techniques are standardized, they get


used across disciplines. When tools are democratized,
agency becomes distributed.”
Jens Hauser, curator 8

The Media Studies scholar and art curator Jens Hauser, born 1969
in Germany, has gained international standing as an expert in the field of Bio Art.
From a first encounter with Ars Electronica at the 1999 Festival, Life Sciences,
flowed his later involvement in the newly created Prix Ars Electronica category
Hybrid Art in 2007. His scientific work at the intersection of media studies, art
history, and epistemology led to his development of a theory of biomediality.
His curatorial work focuses on the interactions between art and technology,
trans-genre and hybrid aesthetics.

60
”For science and for art you need an open
atmosphere in society. We need freedom to perform,
to think and to express. Both science and art need
freedom, openness and trust. Tim Berners-Lee, for
instance, had the freedom and trust to develop
something. That freedom was given to him by the
institute he worked for, and what he did was every
bit as creative as a work of art. He could have
developed anything. What he did develop was the
World Wide Web.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN9

The German physicist Rolf-Dieter Heuer, born 1948, served as


Director-General of CERN from 2009 to 2015, one of the longest terms of the
directors of this institution so far. In his time as Director-General, the discovery of
the Higgs boson in 2012, for which researchers had been looking for almost fifty
years, was made at CERN. Also during his time in office, Heuer, who sees himself
as an enabler of research constantly testing new ground, entered a cooperation
of Ars Electronica and CERN based on the newly implemented Collide@CERN
residency program developed by Ariane Koek at CERN. This cooperation resulted
in the pioneering Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN residency award program,
which in fact served as an “ice-breaker” for further encounters of artists and
scientists at the largest particle laboratory in the world.

“These residencies are about something that is


usually outside of the experience of both groups
interacting with each other: science and art in the
making. It is not so much about the finished product,
a scientific discovery or an artwork. I see this as one of
the most valuable experiences.”
Fernando Comerón, European Southern Observatory10

The astrophysicist Fernando Comerón, born 1965 in Spain, has


been Head Representative of the European Southern Observatory in Chile
since 2013. His research interests in star formation, galactic structure, and
young stellar objects flow into his work at this leading European international
organization for observational astronomy. His openness to the encounter with
the arts led to his deep involvement in the selection processes for the ESO
residencies, and his prudent care of the visiting artists allowed for successful
encounters at the spectacular sites of the ESO observatories in Chile.

61
Finally the efforts and the knowledge of those and numerous other
pioneers in art and science worldwide would converge in what evolved into the
European Digital Art and Science Network in 2014. But the creation of that
network was preceded by an axis of cooperation that turned out to be highly
significant and fruitful for the entire renaissance of the conversation between art
and science. When Ars Electronica and The European Organisation for Nuclear
Research, better known as CERN, joined forces, the impact of this collaboration
provided valuable experiences as well as the public attention necessary for
further development.

A Different Kind of Overture:


Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN
The Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN residency program, running
from 2012 until 2014, was designed as an international competition for digital
artists to win a residency at CERN, the facilities of this international research
organization, founded in 1954. The largest particle physics laboratory in the world
works with the biggest man made machine ever built—the Large Hadron Collider,
which resides in a circular tunnel 27 km in circumference, located 100 meters
underground the countryside near Geneva in Switzerland and France. CERN
provides the particle accelerators for high-energy physics research.

The idea behind the cooperation of Ars Electronica and CERN was to
“take digital creativity to new dimensions by colliding the minds of scientists with
the imaginations of artists”11 and thus seeking “to accelerate innovation across
culture.” The architecture of the program already included elements that would
later feed into the conception of the European Digital Art and Science Network.
An international jury, which convened in the context of the Prix Ars Electronica
jury process, selected the winning artists. The residencies were split into two
parts: A two-month period at CERN, where the artist had a specially dedicated
science mentor, dubbed “inspirational partner,” at their side, was followed by a
month at Ars Electronica Futurelab in Linz with all the options of collaborating
with the transdiscplinary team there and making use of its long experience in
receiving visiting artists. So good care was taken in facilitating and moderating
the entire process of encounters between artists and scientists. Showcases
of the results from the residencies at both partnering institutions—the Globe
of Science and Innovation at CERN in Geneva and at Ars Electronica Festival
in Linz—completed the program.

62
”This is the beauty of science: You learn
something and you open a door. Then you stand in
front of new doors, which you would not have seen
without the knowledge that allowed you to open the
first door. There you realize that you can ask more
detailed questions. I believe that this is very similar for
artists: They realize they can do something and when
they have done it, they can see how to improve it and
how to go in another direction.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN12

In the actual realization of the program, Prix Ars Electronica


Collide@CERN brought three artists from highly different backgrounds and
three different generations to CERN. In 2012 the German artist Julius von
Bismarck was the first winner of such a residency and he in fact fulfilled, as
Rolf-Dieter Heuer describes it13 the role of the “ice-breaker” for the entire
program. Bismarck, who was born in 1983, was the youngest of the three, and
had won the Golden Nica of Prix Ars Electronica in the category Interactive Art
in 2008. As a result of his residency at CERN, he created the piece Versuch unter
Kreisen and presented it at the 2012 Ars Electronica Festival. The piece contains
lights hanging from the ceiling which “turn in their separate orbits out of synch,
driven by real data, but on the 78th turn strangely come into synch together for
one complete circle.” 14 The piece then became the setting for a dance piece
titled Quantum, developed also at CERN by the choreographer Gilles Jobin.

“The visit to CERN was inspiring and renewing.


It put me back in touch with myself. Being at CERN
and having these conversations and then intensely
listening and recording was like going on a spiritual
retreat.”
Bill Fontana, artist 15

The composer and sound-artist Bill Fontana, born 1947 in the US,
arrived for his residency at CERN in 2013. Fontana, who had studied with John
Cage and gained fame with his large scale sound sculptures for institutions
including the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and Tate Modern in London. In 2009 he
won the Golden Nica of Prix Ars Electronica in the category Digital Music & Sound

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Art for his piece Speeds of Time. While at CERN, he turned the Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) into the world’s largest acoustic instrument and created the piece
Acoustic Time Travel. Fontana is strongly interested in revealing hidden sounds in
unlikely places and explored places like the CERN proton source, where the
particles begin their journey into the 27-km accelerator ring. Ultimately he played
the sound of the LHC back to itself in its cavities 100 meters below ground, thus
evoking strong, positive, emotional reactions from the scientists and engineers
present.

The electronic composer and visual artist Ryōji Ikeda, born in 1966 in
Japan, “has gained a reputation as one of the few international artists working
convincingly across both visual and sonic media.”16 He repeatedly performed at
Ars Electronica Festival and in 2001 won the Golden Nica of Prix Ars Electronica
in the category Digital Musics & Sound Art. Inspired by his dialogue with the
artists at CERN in 2014, he based his pieces the planck universe [micro] and the
planck universe [macro] on principles of particle physics and cosmology, striving
to visualize the different scales and magnitudes of the universe.

Bringing the European Digital Art


and Science Network to Life
Together with seven renowned artistic and cultural institutions Ars
Electronica joined forces with some of the leading scientific institutions in
creating the European Digital Art and Science Network. First scientific partners in
what would turn out to be a network of superlatives were: CERN, together with
which the Prix Ars Electronica Collide@CERN residency program—practically the
“overture” to the network—had been designed and realized; ESO, the European
Southern Observatory that was created in 1962 and has built and operates some
of the largest and most advanced telescopes on earth, among them the Very
Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile; The European Space Agency (ESA), Europe’s
gateway to space, developing Europe’s space capability and drawing up and
realizing the European space program, and with a recent partner, the Fraunhofer
Institute for Medical Image Computing (MEVIS), the network continues to grow in
new directions.

The European Digital Art and Science Network was financed by the
European Union program Creative Europe, which contributed half of the budget,
and the participating institutions, which equally shared the other half. Creative
Europe is the European Commission’s framework program for the cultural and
creative sectors.

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The superlatives of the network are not limited to the partner’s
impressive research facilities and spectacular discoveries. The research at
those organizations also relates to some of the most fundamental questions
of mankind. They represent a substantial part of humankind’s efforts to push
ever further the horizons of our knowledge about the world.

“All of mankind’s hopes and curiosity are


so much brought to one spot in those huge
machines like the Large Hadron Collider at CERN
or the Very Large Telescope at the observatories
of ESO in the Atacama desert. This is telling so
much more about us and our societies and the way
our science works.”
Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab 17

Scientists at CERN deal with the cornerstones of quantum physics


and have found some of the smallest particles known so far. In 2012 they
announced the discovery of a new particle, identified as the so-called “Higgs
boson,” whose existence had first been suggested by Nobel Prize Winner Peter
Higgs in 1964. Researchers at CERN have also been successful in creating
antimatter and maintaining antihydrogen for over 15 minutes in 2011. Their
research draws close to the singularity, the so-called “Big Bang” in the prevailing
cosmological model for the universe. CERN is also the birthplace of the World
Wide Web.

The sites of the European Southern Observatory (ESO)—some of them


at the Atacama desert in Chile at altitudes as high as 5,000 meters above sea
level—are among the most surreal on earth. This gigantic eye to the universe—
built from numerous different instruments—looks deep into space and far back
in time, determining the age of the universe and finding evidence for a black hole
at the center of the Milky Way. The successful search for exoplanets conducted
there is ultimately the search for extraterrestrial life.

The European Space Agency (ESA)—with facilities scattered across


Europe and a spaceport at Kourou in French Guiana—conducts missions as
spectacular as landing the spacecraft Rosetta’s lander module Philae on the
comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, which had a two-year rendezvous
studying the comet. The ExoMars program sends spacecraft to Mars with the
aim of finding out whether life has ever existed there.

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The Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image Computing (MEVIS) in
Bremen in Germany develops applications for the clinical routine. Its research
and development directly address matters of reliable diagnosis, safe treatment
planning, and measurable therapeutic success for severe diseases such as
cancer.

However, the network includes not only big players in the world of
science, but a number of influential cultural institutions across Europe, which
are active in the areas of Media Art, Bio Art, etc. High-profile institutions with
a long standing in the emerging Media Arts like LABoral in Spain, Kapelica
Gallery / Kersnikova in Slovenia, Science Gallery Dublin, DIG gallery in Slovakia,
GV Art London, Center for the Promotion of Science in Serbia and Zaragoza City
of Knowledge Foundation in Spain belong to this cultural side of the network.
It is this cultural element in the network, that—together with Ars Electronica’s
own capabilities—brings cultural know-how into the project and endows the
art and science encounters with due visibility in the art world.

Together with the institutions on board in The European Digital Art and
Science Network, Ars Electronica developed a residency program to allow artists
to go to the research facilities and engage in encounters with the scientists there.
Those residencies from the outset included not only time at the facilities of one
of the partners, but also time at Ars Electronica Futurelab and presentations at
Ars Electronica Festival and across the various cultural partner institutions of the
network.

“The nature and the structure of the science


organizations involved are also important for the
selection and curation process. In the beginning we
tended to say: This is a great science institution, let’s
look for artists who want to go there! So we were
mainly looking at the artistic quality of the proposal.
Together with the representatives from the
institutions we gradually learned how important it is
to think of the matchmaking between artists and
scientists in terms of working style and accessibility.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica18

The artists selected for the first rounds of residencies come from a
number of different countries and cultures and they represent a broad variety of
artistic approaches and working styles. Artists working on their own are present
here as well as artist groups or collectives, artists with extensive experience with
residencies as well as those entirely new to this kind of opportunity.

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“I would like to go into deeper research on the
philosophical connection posed by Plato and
Pythagoras about the notion that music, mathematic
and astronomy were essentially different science and
disciplines, but with a common principle of origin.”
María Ignacia Edwards, artist 19

María Ignacia Edwards from Chile first went to the ESO observatories
La Silla and ALMA located in her home country and then travelled to a residency
at Ars Electronica Futurelab in Linz to complete her piece titled Encounters for
Mobile Instrument of String and Air. The Mobile Instrument she created is able to
capture the movement of 11 swings located at distant places as a reference to
time and the motion of the universe. The swings, installed at the cultural partners
of the network, fed back into musical notes played on a piano at Ars Electronica
Center in Linz. In her art she works with equilibrium, using the lightness and
weightlessness of objects that she brings into balance by deploying their own
weight or counterweights. At first glance her works may be perceived as purely
aesthetic objects, while in fact the constructions are the result of elaborate
mathematical and physical calculations.

“It’s always quite daunting stepping into any


environment that has a distinct language and culture
that is new to you. Through our previous experiences
in science labs we have learnt to embrace the
challenges that this type of journey presents. As a
result we have developed a confidence in our line of
enquiry, and learnt how to enjoy the intensity of the
experience.”
Ruth Jarman, artist duo Semiconductor 20

The English artist duo Semiconductor—Ruth Jarman and Joe


Gerhardt—spent a two-month residency at CERN. In their work—and a number
of previous residencies at research institutions—they strive to “explore the
material nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of
science and technology, questioning how these devices mediate our experi-
ences.”21 For them the field of particle physics offered the missing link in their
work: “Having previously explored the make-up of matter on astronomical and
geological scales we have been waiting for the right opportunity to engage with
matter on a quantum scale (...).”22 The title of their piece A particular kind of
conversation somehow—on a metaphorical level—seems to anticipate the
encounters with the scientists at CERN.

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“Actually, we feel a bit like explorers ourselves,
like we’re trailblazers who are being permitted to
penetrate a remote, inaccessible region to obtain
insights into another world.”
Juliane Götz, artists collective Quadrature 23

Quadrature is an artists collective from Berlin, Germany, formed by


Juliane Götz, Sebastian Neitsch, and Jan Bernstein, who have been collaborating
since the year 2009. To their residency at ESO they brought the experience from
previous projects of theirs like Voyager and Satelliten, which in 2015 had earned
them an Honorary Mention in the Interactive Art category of Prix Ars Electronica.
Dealing with the methods humans employ to explore the cosmos, they often
focus on the contradictions between knowledge and comprehension. In addition
to being acquainted with the exploration of space they also could build upon
their practice in collective processes that proved valuable in the encounter with
the scientists. Their piece MASSES—Motors And Stones Searching Equilibrium
State displays a permanent state of incessant motion, which they describe as
“a fragile but constant situation between fall and float, an endless dance of
observation and calibration.”24 The piece clearly relates to one of the deepest
impressions from their visit to the observatories: the process of self-calibration
of the huge telescopes before the next night of observation begins.

“Even with the explosives I work with there is


a hidden order which reveals itself when used in
particular ways, and it’s all about being able to see this
underlying, mathematical order. The same applies to
the methodologies used in scientific research.”
Aoife van Linden Tol, artist25

The Irish artist Aoife van Linden Tol primarily works with explosive
media, inspired by different scientific disciplines like chemistry, physics, and
cosmology. To her residency at the European Space Agency she brought plans
for her project Star Storm which tackles the life cycle of stars and the physical
processes of stellar formation and evolution across the Universe. Her approach
to fundamental questions relating to the universe includes looking at nature’s
explosions as creative scenarios. Her residency was initiated by a brief visit to

68
the European Space Operations Centre at Darmstadt in Germany for the arrival
at Mars of the ExoMars mission, followed by a two-part residency at the facilities
of the European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in the
Netherlands. With her own work being highly multidisciplinary, she embarked
on encounters with the scientists by involving them in different participatory
projects, clearly and creatively going beyond the usual type of art and science
conversations.

“As an artist, my approach is strongly


connected to science. Because art is not only a way to
express personal aesthetic, it can also bring out
critical thought.”
Yen Tzu Chang, artist 26

The Taiwanese artist Yen Tzu Chang spent her residency at the
Fraunhofer Institute for Medical Image Computing (MEVIS) and at Ars Electronica
Futurelab. She sees art and science as a cycle system in her art, with both
elements being mutually beneficial to her interdisciplinary performances and
installations. The residency also enabled her to take the step from working with
science to directly working with scientists. With her project Whose scalpel she
realizes a sound performance inspired by an Auditory guidance prototype for
navigated liver surgery developed by Fraunhofer MEVIS. Different aspects of
this tool have inspired the creation of her performance piece, where she
interprets the relationship between surgeons and the medical machine as a
kind of struggle between humanity and technology.27

“I see the institutions as platforms where


different stakeholders meet: engineers, scientists,
artists, mediators, curators. As a curator I can share the
intimate experiences of how artworks grow, which the
artists do not share among themselves. We also need
to create an opportunity for the artists that their work
is understood properly. If we presented an artist, even
an internationally renowned one, in a context that is
not socially and publicly prepared for it, we would
miss our goal.”
Jurij Krpan, Kapelica Gallery28

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The projects that flowed from those residencies in the European Digital
Art and Science Network were presented in a number of exhibitions, conferences,
and workshops among the cultural partner organizations of the network. Different
formats and thematic focal points were applied. The exhibition Materia Prima at
LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial in Gijón in Spain looked at new
alliances between art and science while reflecting the role of computer code as
the materia prima the participating artists work with. At Ars Electronica Center
the exhibition The Alchemists of Art and Science included speculative, futuristic
visions that have emerged from the amalgamation of artistic and scientific
approaches.

Those presentations served as an important part of the network’s


activities to complement the residencies with key elements of the full artistic
production chain—from inspiration and concept to production, presentation,
and critical discourse on an international scale.

“This shared learning process and the building


up of competence in the European Digital Art and Sci-
ence Network included developing new ways to present
the outcome. At cultural institutions like LABoral for
instance, we presented not only the outcome from the
residencies, but also other examples of art and science
collaborations. For this we developed a kind of hybrid
between exhibition and laboratory, which has not been
done before in that way and was extremely interesting
also for the audience. Such mutual benefit comes only
with a networked project like this one.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica29

70
II. EXPERIENCES
AND LESSONS

How to Enjoy the Learning Curve of


Art and Science Residencies
Residency programs like the one conducted by the European Digital
Art and Science Network are first and foremost learning experiences—clearly
for the individual artists and scientists involved in the encounters, but also for
the institutions, both scientific and cultural. Based on the amount of previous
experience with the format of the residency, the learning curve can be more or
less steep. There are good reasons for that, since basically the residencies are
about facilitating the meeting of two different cultures. Mastering the art of
turning this into fruitful experiences for both sides can prove quite challenging.

”Curiosity is one thing, but in order to find


something new, creativity and ingenuity are
necessary. In this respect, the mindsets of artists and
scientists are very similar to a large extent. Some of
the artists that came to CERN made a choice early in
their careers between science and art, so it’s nice to
see that circle being closed through the arts
programme.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN30

“You are selecting both the quality of the art


and the mindset of the person.”
Michael Doser, CERN31

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“We should understand the curatorial process
for art and science residencies according to the
original Latin source ‘curare’—the humble attitude of
‘taking care of’. The goal is to find those science- and
technology-literate artists, who will really challenge
the scientists.”
Jens Hauser, curator 32

The learning process starts with the task of selecting the right artists for
the right receiving institutions. While a curated selection process may easily lean
towards the more established artists already in the loop of the art world and with
recognition in the art and science circles, an open call will lead to a broader
dissemination of information about the residency program as well as a broader
and more diverse set of submissions. The selection by a jury with experts from
media arts plus representatives from the receiving institutions had to identify
the key criteria for a successful residency. Whereas in juries awarding an art
prize, the artistic quality and consistency of the submitted work would get most
attention, in this case additional aspects come into consideration. The challenge
with art and science residencies is to select artists who also bring with them the
communicative skills and an appropriate mindset for adapting to a situation
presumably alien to them and for engaging in a lasting conversation with all
different kinds of scientists at the facility.

“Recommendation for science institutions:


Curate the residencies. Provide the artists with
contacts, legitimacy, ask them to showcase their
thoughts and work. Select artists like you would select
a science project: insist on coherence and depth and
quality of the proposal and then allow them to go
where the work takes them.”
Michael Doser, CERN33

The submissions can also pose another problem. Some artists will
submit an elaborate concept of what they are planning to do as a result of the
residency, some will be more vague about this, and some even resist submitting
such information in favor of a completely open process. As it turns out, it may
be important to also consider an open ending to be acceptable, since the whole
endeavor of art and science is about entering new territory in many respects.
Still, this involves a fair amount of risk for all sides involved. After all, there is
no art and no science without the risk of failure.

72
Fernando Comerón from the European Southern Observatory gives
this description of his own learning process during the selection of the artists: “One
of the first things that surprised me when going through the applications at the Ars
Electronica jury, was how inconcrete the artists were about the results they wanted
to achieve. Then I realized that this was reflecting a methodological difference. When
I write a scientific proposal to have access to the telescopes, I need to provide a
scientific justification, what I want to achieve, what are the expected results and if
we do not get those results, what do we learn from not getting them. In the case of
the artists I discovered that this was not only not expected, but that it was even
considered counterproductive. It would close the road of artistic discovery.”34

For the science partners in this network, the vague or missing description
of the goals of a submitted art project may be more unusual than for art curators.
Scientists from early on in their careers are trained to describe their projects in
such an elaborate way, whereas artists are usually far less often subject to such
submissions of their concepts when they apply for grants, awards, or residencies
at art institutions. This structural difference between the working conditions for art
and science points to a whole set of differences that Claudia Mignone35 reflects.

“Regarding the two cultures I see the differences


more in the way of working and the way that careers are
framed in institutions, rather than in the individuals.
When they start their training, scientists have very
similar questions, curiosity, and spirit as artists have.
But when you finish your training, there is no such thing
as an ‘independent’ scientist. So the focus is shifted more
on the results, rather than on the process of research
itself.”
Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA—European Space Agency 36

Such differences become apparent when it comes to avoiding some of


the most famous misconceptions about the work of scientists and artists today.
The daily work of scientists is far from being a series of spectacular discoveries or
eureka moments, but rather a long stretch of relatively boring office work. Even at
facilities like the European Southern Observatory, the astronomers would sit in a
control room all night and not in the cupola of one of the telescopes. The actual
work with the data from the observations would take place much later in the scien-
tists’ offices. Scientists today work mainly in larger institutions and are exposed to
all the load of communication, documentation, and administration that comes with
any larger structure.

73
”It has to be a win-win-situation. A win for the
scientist is of course to explain their work to artists, who
may not have much scientific knowledge, in a way that
they can use and transform into an art project. In that
process you see whether the artist has grasped the
main sense of the science. A win for the artist is to
create a work that stands alone as a piece of art, but
that contains the scientific inspiration for anyone who
wants to look for it.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN37

On the other hand, artists today—unless they are truly successful—work


mostly under precarious conditions that force them to constantly look for new
opportunities to fund their art and sustain themselves. They will not be part of
any organization but will be collaborating in a highly networked mode with others
in order to realize their projects. With any arts bordering on different kinds of
technology and research and involving a broad set of skills, this turns out to be
increasingly so. The image of the lone genius in her or his studio is clearly a thing
of the past, or rather an echo from a constructed mythology out of romantic times.

“We need to seriously look into the question,


what is the real benefit, the real outcome. In the end it is
the artists and the scientists who devote a substantial
amount of their work time and an essential part of their
career path to this collaboration.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica38

The scientists whom an artist may meet during a residency are far from
being a homogenous group. It is extremely useful to be aware of the different
sub-groups and the different structural conditions under which they work at a
certain facility, since these may strongly influence their encounter with the artists.
Senior scientists are generally considered more easily accessible to visiting artists
as they have less pressure on them to pursue their career paths. Scientists
engaged in basic research may also be easier to involve in a conversation than
astronomers making use of limited telescope time assigned to their research
project. Staff scientists in an organization will have lots of additional duties that do
not burden visiting scientists who come and go as the artists-in-residence do.

“What most inspired me about them was their


level of sensitivity and huge commitment to their work.”
María Ignacia Edwards, artist 39

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Very probably the most difficult group to engage in encounters with
artists are the younger scientists with maximum pressure on them to work on
several projects at the same time and to create a significant output of published
papers. Still, that group should not be left out of the game, since they belong to a
new generation of scientists who may be increasingly open to an exchange with
the arts. Michael Doser of CERN recommends artists to simply follow those
younger scientists around their day and find a kind of “embedded mode” with
their research.

”What matters
is the chemistry between people.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN40

“With the residency, everybody had


to leave their comfort zone.”
Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS41

Some artists also opened a dialog with the engineers, who often
form a larger group than the scientists at a facility. They are responsible for
maintaining the functioning of the different instruments and thus provide the
foundations for the actual research done. They will be able to provide a lot of
understanding of the facility itself, they see the instruments as “their”
instruments and the scientists as their users. Thus they may also express
different views on the overall topics of the research than the scientists.

“A basic knowledge of the environment, and


what is actually done there, is quite important. There
were some artists who expected to see a scientific
discovery, who wanted to participate in the mind of
the scientist at a time when the eureka moment
happens. But this is something that does not happen
at the observatory, this is not the place to expect it.
We wanted to avoid that the artist gets disappointed.
Artists wanted to work with the data as they come, but
there is very limited use of the data as they come. You
don’t get spectacular images or even very informative
images. You need more time to work with the data and
this will not happen at the observatory.”
Fernando Comerón, European Southern Observatory42

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Preparation is another key to the success of a residency. Of course
artists should come well prepared, even if they strive to arrive as open-minded as
possible. Information about the facility and the different areas of research done
there is essential to navigate through the enormous amount of information and the
strong wave of experiences awaiting the artist on site. In some cases an initial short
visit for orientation and planning turned out to be effective, something that of
course is not always possible—especially with such remote locations as Chile’s
Atacama Desert.

But the receiving institution should also be prepared. Given some


pre-information about the artists from the selection process, they can think of
doing a certain amount of pre-filtering of the scientists who would be initially
interested in meeting the artists. It seems essential to ask the artists in the early
stages of their residency to give a presentation of their work and their ideas for the
residency. This will be useful in making the artists visible inside the organization,
but also helps to avoid misconceptions about more contemporary forms of art
some of the scientists may not be familiar with. Media artists are mainly used to
situations where their work is not immediately understood as it does not follow
traditional paradigms, namely, lingering concepts of “beauty.”

“Most of the successful art and science


residencies take place in those institutions who work in
sciences that have a proximity to spiritual as well as
fundamental ethical questions. Maybe people who
work in those areas are more sensitive to the need to
open up their thinking and take care of public opinion.
For many publicly funded institutions it is important to
contribute to a better understanding of their service to
society. That is a legitimate motivation to enter art and
science collaborations.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica43

Preparing the organization should also include prior information for their
staff about the motivations for the institution to participate in this art and science
residency program. Claudia Mignone (Vitrociset Belgium for ESA) compares this to
scientist’s perception of science communication: “There is a similar discussion
going on regarding the engagement of scientists in the context of public outreach
and science communication. Many of them like to be involved in these activities,
but often find it challenging to balance the time and efforts spent away from the
core functions of their research work. Some have suggested a formal acknowl-
edgement or reward system to make this part of the work more relevant and
visible, especially for early-career scientists, so that they can feel comfortable
spending a certain amount of time engaging with the public.
I believe something like that could also be applied to the interaction with artists in
a broader cultural context.”44

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”Acceptance in the organization came through
the quality of the artists, the enthusiasm of the
inspirational partners at CERN, and the reactions of
the public who came to the events. Then people came
to me and said ‘What a nice program!’ This happened
relatively fast.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN45

One of the lessons from the residencies is the need to allocate the
resources of one person being available to take care of the artists for the entire
duration of the residency. Support only in the initial phase will not be sufficient,
since it is not only about logistical support for the artists but also about moderating
the entire process. It is only through the allocation of such human resources that
the institutional learning effects can be secured and made productive.

“You will need time and resources throughout the


entire stay of the artist. Consider at least one person on
site to spend a substantial amount of their time taking
care not only of the logistics, but also of mentoring in
order to pair the visiting artist with the right people on
site.”
Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA—European Space Agency 46

There are different philosophies about the appropriate duration of a


residency. While there is no one rule befitting all kinds of facilities and all kinds
of artists, certain aspects become clear. A minimum time of around three to four
weeks seems necessary to manage the first orientation and to get below the
“glossy surfaces.” The maximum time will rather be defined by the available budget
for the residency, the resources of the organization, and the working schedule and
other obligations of the artists. The more internationally renowned an artist is, the
shorter the individual visits will very probably be. Splitting the residency into two
or more shorter segments can be useful, especially with respect to the aspect of
human relationships.

“One to three months is a good time window for


residencies. If the residency is shorter than one month,
the artist comes in and is overwhelmed and has no time
to start asking interesting questions. If it is longer than
three months, then the artist wants to become a
scientist. Then the discrepancy between what they
would want to do here and what they would be able to
do, becomes too large.”
Michael Doser, CERN47

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Art and Science: The Human Factor
Across all residencies in this network it became clear that time is of the
essence for the building up of human relationships between artists and scientists.
Although we may strive to cast a primarily structural view on the prerequisites for
a successful residency, we will have to acknowledge the human factor in this
encounter.

Reflecting on the experience of the residency at the European Space


Agency, Claudia Mignone drew a parallel with ESA’s Rosetta mission and its
extended “rendezvous” with a comet as opposed to the “fly-by” approach of
previous space missions. For such an extended “rendezvous” of artists and
scientists, a human relationship is the necessary foundation, which in itself takes
time to develop and grow. The willingness of scientists in a busy research
schedule to engage in a long-term exchange will grow once they personally know
the artists, have been exposed to their way of working, could connect with the
artistic approaches, begin to enjoy the exchange, and maybe even start seeing
beneficial effects for their own work.

“Recommendation for visiting artists: be


prepared, have an idea and a plan, but be ready to
change it entirely. Be focused but also as open as
possible. Expect to be surprised. Be ready to change
route. This is the essence of exploration.”
Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA—European Space Agency 48

Not all artists in the context of a residency will go as far as Aoife van
Linden Tol at ESTEC, the European Space Research and Technology Centre and
ESA’s technical heart, in conceiving and offering different formats for involving
the scientists in participatory activities like mini-workshops, brainstorming
sessions, or collective artworks. But inspiration can be taken from such a
highly communicative and creative approach to facilitating the encounters.
The initiative for new formats of exchange can come from the artists, but could
also be offered and managed by the institution.

“Art and science residencies are about


introducing different systems to each other. Therefore
highly practical methods can be very helpful, if you
want to develop this beyond a small group of very
dedicated and already experienced individuals on
both sides.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica49

78
Innovative formats of exchange can also help tackling the problems
of a language barrier that exist despite all efforts of popular science. Good or
bad school experiences with mathematics or physics are strong suspects for
determining later readiness to approach scientific concepts expressed in
mathematical terms or for scientific concepts and thinking remaining alien to
a person. In its concepts and languages modern science has moved quite far
away from everyday understanding. We are basically still conducting our every-
day lives in a world that appears to be well-defined by the laws that Sir Isaac
Newton (1642–1726) formulated three hundred years ago. Around a century
ago, the Theory of Relativity and the findings of Quantum Physics have greatly
expanded Newton’s world and, more broadly, the realm of classical physics, but
we happily continue to live as if Newton’s view of the world remained unharmed.
This profound gap points to the numerous chasms that separate our common
understanding of the world around us from the knowledge about it that science
provides today.

“On the one hand, we wished to open up the


institution—the knowledge, the methodologies, and
everything that is developed here—to another group
of researchers, the artists. On the other hand, we had
the expectation of bringing complementary views
from the side of the humanities into the everyday
working of a scientific institution.”
Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA—European Space Agency 50

”The transparent bug-fixing mentality at our


organization was also lived within the residency—the
artist and the participating scientists could take part
in every conversation in a transparent way.”
Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS 51

The art of engaging scientists in a conversation has more to do with


passions shared by scientists and artists than with asking them “scientific”
questions. Looking at shared passions does not imply to cover up existing
differences, but is rather a step towards one of the secrets of successful residen-
cies. First, there is the profound and mutual respect for the passion and dedica-
tion with which the other side is doing their research or their art. Next comes the
discovery that the underlying questions of a lot of the research that is being done
in this network are among the most existential questions asked by humankind,
which is followed by the realization that also non-scientists can have a lifelong
passion for astronomy, cosmology, or space travel.

79
”Artists should think of the scientists they
encounter as open-minded persons at least as curious
as themselves.”
Jens Hauser, curator 52

“Recommendation for visiting artists: Interact


with the scientists, ask them about their dreams,
hopes, fears (and a little bit about their work). Ask
them to draw their work, watch their hands as they
talk.”
Michael Doser, CERN53

Growing up with science fiction and popular culture plays an


important role in this field of powerful passions and far-reaching imagination.
The enthusiasm for science fiction feeds back into a lasting interest in the
science in the stories. Having seen the first landing on the moon on television
as a child remains a key experience for an entire generation. Having followed
the Star Trek television series may have kindled interest also in the physics
behind it.54

“We grew up with stories and images of our


universe, both real-life accounts and utopian ones.
Rockets, time travel, space stations, life on Mars,
aliens … Scientists aren’t the only ones for whom the
cosmos and space exploration provide a virtually
inexhaustible source of inspiration.”
Sebastian Neitsch, artists collective Quadrature 55

Science fiction may also provide a common set of stories and meta-
phors that artists and scientists can share and use as an agent of initiating their
collaboration. This does not mean that the collaboration would then be about
science fiction instead of the actual science, but that sci-fi serves as a kind of
common ground to open up the conversation. Even if the role of science fiction
does not reach that far in a certain encounter, it might still be part of the motiva-
tional background that led some artists to an art that closely relates to science.

80
“It is valuable to use the enthusiasm we see in
artists for space science, particle physics or genetic
engineering, and other spiritually or ethically loaded
scientific research in order to draw experiences and
models that are also applicable to other areas. The
power of art could be of great benefit to other areas of
society. These residencies are prototyping examples
with the aim to see how—in a larger scenario—art can
gain a more influential role in society. The overall
vision from our side is to see how art can engage in as
many different areas of society as possible.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica56

Popular culture does contribute to shaping the public image,


especially of the more visible and prominent research institutions, a fact that
does not always turn out to be helpful to those institutions in their effort to
communicate what their research is actually about. CERN is a good example of
productively handling this. In the book Angels & Demons, published in 2000 by
US-writer Dan Brown, there are references to CERN and to the topic of antimatter.
In a scene set at CERN, two fictional characters, CERN director Maximilan Kohler
and Harvard Professor Robert Langdon appear:

“Kohler took a sharp left and entered a wide hallway adorned with
awards and commendations. A particularly large plaque dominated the entry.
Langdon slowed to read the engraved bronze as they passed.

ARS ELECTRONICA AWARD


For Cultural Innovation in the Digital Age
Awarded to Tim Berners Lee and CERN
for the invention of the
WORLDWIDE WEB”57

In a kind of memetic Möbius strip this scene connects popular culture’s


myths about the science practiced at CERN back with Prix Ars Electronica’s actual
awarding of Tim Berners-Lee with an Honorary Golden Nica in 1995 for the
concept of Hypertext. In reaction to the book and the subsequent movie Angels
& Demons, directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks as Robert Langdon,
CERN set up a website58 where explanation and clarification about research at
CERN and scientific knowledge about antimatter are offered.

81
How to Avoid the “Scylla and
Charybdis” of Art and Science
Wrong expectations from both sides can also hamper the exchange in
the framework of a residency. Some of these are specially complex and difficult
to avoid. They present, as Michael Doser of CERN59 put it, the “Scylla and
Charybdis” of art and science encounters. Like the two monsters from Homer’s
Odyssey at opposing shores of what may have been the Strait of Messina, two
specially dangerous pitfalls await those involving themselves in art and science
residency programs. Their danger lies in turning those encounters into one-sided
affairs with one partner cannabalizing the other.

”The expectation that art helps to communi-


cate science better is legitimate, as long as you don’t
instrumentalize the artist. Art can be a welcome
addition to a scientific project, but it should never
be something that you, as a scientist, demand from
the artist. The chance of success is highest if you don’t
demand anything, but simply seek to inspire. You
already break a large part of the barrier between
science and society when you show that you are
open.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN60

Scientific institutions often tend to see the visiting artists in the context
of their own communications efforts. Art is then understood primarily in visual
and aesthetic terms and thus the expectation comes for the artists to provide
a “visualization” of the science. Such expectations are legitimate insofar as
they result from the evident need to communicate the results from research
and the experience of a rising public awareness of certain—more spectacular—
achievements of science. But although art is essentially communication, artists
are not necessarily the better communicators, as Gerfried Stocker61 points out.
But if they want to engage with sciences, artists will need to consider these kinds
of expectations. And science institutions will wisely make their expectations
clear from the outset and openly discuss what they may expect and what not.

82
“If we are looking for a symmetrical relation-
ship between artists and scientists, we should look
for a relationship where the work of both is mutually
inspirational.”
Jurij Krpan, Kapelica Gallery62

On the other side, artists may see the scientists they meet solely
as sources of information and inspiration without any readiness on their part
to give something back. That “something” will certainly not need to be pre-
defined and can simply consist of the quality of a conversation that is interesting
and inspiring for both sides. It is more about the attitude than about the actual
outcome. An important aspect in that context is to make clear that the artists
should be put under no obligation to produce an art project, that is to deliver
a “result” from the residency. Some institutions, like CERN, already made that
part of their policy for art residencies.

“The artists who come here are under no


obligation to produce anything. There is no
expectation that art comes out of the residency. The
important thing is the discovery, the process, the
opening of minds, if we are lucky, or the change in
direction that can then propagate through future
work.”
Michael Doser, CERN63

The real danger of this “Scylla and Charybdis” situation is that such
scenarios, if not addressed early on and in a transparent way, can backfire and
stand in the way of actually establishing a sustainable conversation and mutual
exchange between artists and scientist in the residency format.

“The presence of the artist during the


residency allowed for more openness.”
Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS64

83
In most cases artists used their residency at a facility mainly for getting
input. Only later did they go into the actual conception phase of an art project
and then arrived at Ars Electronica Futurelab to bring their project to production.
However, there is no single formula for defining the stages of a project for
everybody.

“We knew from the start that the time of the


artists at the research institutions would be consumed
by getting knowledge, absorbing inspiration, doing
some reflection, and getting feedback from the
scientists. Then in order to best help the artists to
produce the outcome of their residencies, we used the
entire production chain available: Time at the Ars
Electronica Futurelab to produce and Ars Electronica
Festival as a presentation platform.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica65

“Laboratories like the Ars Electronica Futurelab


in Linz, the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge or Art+Com
in Berlin have a permanent team in place from
different disciplines. In the tradition of a laboratory to
experiment and to prove a theory it always was very
important to work cross disciplines. These places are
something like a role model for having additional
trans-disciplinary approaches. Here artists and
scientist can meet on a platform where crossing
disciplines is a daily practice.”
Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab66

84
Some may come already with a concept to the residency and then
merely enrich and refine it. For some the conceptualizing work would start during
the residency to be finalized at Ars Electronica Futurelab. Some—like Quadrature
at ESO—would spend some extra time by themselves in the country after their
time at the observatories and there start the conceptualizing process in their
group. In all the various scenarios, the second part of the residency at Ars
Electronica Futurelab proved very valuable, since the team there could adapt to
the different needs of the artists—from entering into a dialogue on a conceptual
level to hands-on technical solutions for the final art piece.

“How do you get your work recognized? There


is a clear parallel in what is frustrating about the two
systems of science and of art. Both would like to do
things that are not commercial and not easy to be
accepted. These networks of art and science provide a
framework of credibility.”
Fernando Comerón, European Southern Observatory67

Even though a finished art project was not an obligation, most of the
artists came up with a project and made good use of the many opportunities to
make their works seen at Ars Electronica Festival and in different presentation
formats at the partner institutions across this European Network for Digital Art
and Science. And even though such art and science residencies are basically
about the process and the interaction and not about a specific result, the goal of
an art piece to be exhibited or performed helped guide the process and gave all
sides a more concrete understanding of the content and the direction of their
encounter. So it turned out to be very useful that the residency program was
designed with the entire artistic production chain in mind and that it offered
support and a platform for each step on the way.

85
III.
CULTURES,
PLACES, AND
AGENTS

Opening New Perspectives


on Art and Science Collaborations
The encounters of artists and scientists open a new strand of
conversations. The situation may seem remindful of a huge room full of
remarkable people, who in that very room—as the artist James Lee Byars once
envisioned68—would ask each other the questions they usually pose only to
themselves. They may belong to very different cultures of insight, but they
clearly share an extraordinary curiosity and passion for those questions that
fill the room once the conversation has started.

“Intelligent questions asked by an artist are


not questions about the science. We do not ask the
artists to become physicists. It is more about their
conceptual questions, fundamental questions going
beyond the superficial. Questions about what it means
to be doing science and what it means to understand
the universe. Questions that launch reflection in the
scientist. Then it becomes a dialogue. That’s what you
are really looking for.”
Michael Doser, CERN69

86
This is a conversation that has been resumed after it paused through
most of the Industrial Age, and it will not stop so easily again. It is gaining
momentum and increasing in urgency in the light of two unsettling develop-
ments: the critical conditions of the survival of the ecosphere and of freedom in
open societies as well as a backlash of religious and ideological fundamentalism,
a regression in human development behind everything that modern science and
modern art stand for.

“Science, its insights or its methods, are, for


us, inalienably connected to art. Both are seeking
answers, seeking not-yet-posed questions, seeking
new possibilities.”
Sebastian Neitsch, artists collective Quadrature 70

Only through conversations like this, may both the sciences and the
arts hope to overcome their own restricting paradigms and structural limitations.
So the expectations are high and the drive for evermore far reaching encounters
is getting stronger and stronger on both sides. The hoped-for “quantum leap”
from art and science encounters to actual collaborations cannot be forced, but
the conditions for it to happen can be prepared. The lessons learned from
residency programs like the one initiated and enabled by the European Digital
Art and Science Network should serve as a useful resource of knowledge in
facilitating further encounters.

“Certainly there is want for collaboration and


for understanding. The scientist looks for description
and understanding, while the artist is looking for
meaning. It is the process in which the scientist can
learn more from the artist. The open mind and the
methodology of the artist is something that can be
enriching for the scientist.”
Fernando Comerón, European Southern Observatory71

When that quantum leap will happen, chances are good for a new
kind of “third culture” to develop. The ideas of authors such as C. P. Snow and
John Brockman72, who propagated a third culture beyond the old opposition of
conventional scientists and literary intellectuals, will then be carried forward to
new scenarios of collaborative research involving scientists and artists, and of
the cultural mediators facilitating the process.

87
“Buckminster Fuller inspired me. He said that
the reason why he loves working with artists is
because they are the only ones who are taught to
be comprehensive, to break rules, and to look for
something new. Most disciplines are taught to be
specialized and reductionist. So when you talk to an
artist, it is kind of a natural thing that she / he would
be exploring and thinking about how things
connect—artists play a really important role in society.”
Victoria Vesna, UCLA Art|Sci Center 73

While the facilities of scientific research—logically and organically—


provided the stage for the encounters during the residencies, other places may
come into the picture. The “return visit” of scientists at the artists’ studio is still a
rare occasion, mainly reserved to those cases where a long-term relationship of
exchange resulted from the residency.

“Not primarily for the sake of art or for the sake


of science, but for the sake of society the chance for
an actual collaboration between artists and scientists
is important. If the collaboration allows both partners
to participate in the outcome, then both sides gain a
lot of experience that they can take back to their own
work in their disciplines.”
Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab74

For future collaborations that take place over longer periods of time,
there may be the need for a “third place,” a space of free and open exchange
beyond—and in addition to—the facilities of the science institutions and the
artists’ studios with all their structural constraints. This would be a kind of “art and
science lab,” whose working prototypes can be found at pioneering institutions
like Ars Electronica Center and Futurelab in Linz or at the UCLA Art|Sci Center in
California.

“Art studios and laboratories


should not be separate.”
Victoria Vesna, UCLA Art|Sci Center75

88
“We would need to create opportunities for
artists and scientists to meet on a regular basis. We
would need to create a kind of oasis for them, without
pushing them in a certain direction.”
Jurij Krpan, Kapelica Gallery76

Legend has it that at the entrance of the Platonic Academy the words
“Let None But Geometers Enter Here” were inscribed. As new generations of
artists and scientists come into the conversation, more and more “digital natives”
are part of this exchange on both sides. The places of art and science encounters
will, however, require in addition to that a new kind of literacy enabling this very
art and science exchange to flow into collaborative projects our societies and our
planet are very much in need of. We will recognize the emerging future agents of
art and science collaboration by exactly this type of literacy. To help in this very
process is what projects like the European Digital Art and Science Network are
actually here for.

“Artists are able to create the stories and the


images that society needs, not to understand how
science works, but to understand what science and
technology mean to us. This is one of the very
promising and interesting aspects of these art and
science encounters: To create messages that are
telling us how science and technology are changing
our lives. This is maybe even a responsibility of art.”
Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica 77

Andreas J. Hirsch (AT). Born 1961 in Vienna, Austria, Andreas J. Hirsch lives
and works there as a writer, art curator, and photographic artist. He obtained
his PhD in Law from the University of Vienna in 1986. His writings include
Alexandra Uccusic

books on Pablo Picasso, Tina Modotti, Friedensreich Hundertwasser, and


HR Giger as well as the children’s book Florian Featherlight and the Quest
for the Magic Pearl. As curator of KUNST HAUS WIEN from 2009 until 2014,
he was responsible for large monographic exhibitions of photography
including René Burri, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Linda McCartney. He has
worked with artists as diverse as Franz West, Bill Fontana, Scott S. Snibbe, and HR Giger.
His involvement with Ars Electronica started in 1996 with the concept for the SKY Media Loft
of the new Ars Electronica Center. From 2004 until 2007 he served on the jury of Prix Ars
Electronica for the category Digital Communities, which he had helped to create. He curated
the conference Open Source Life at Ars Electronica Festival 2010 with speakers including Saskia
Sassen, Joichi Ito, Derrick de Kerckhove, and John Thackara. When the Swiss artist
HR Giger became “Featured Artist” of Ars Electronica Festival 2013, he curated the exhibition
HR Giger – The Art of Biomechanics at LENTOS Art Museum and the project HR Giger’s
World for Deep Space at Ars Electronica Center. He participated in the 2015 Festival,
POST CITY, with his photographic piece Re-Reading the City, inspired by situationist ideas
and psychogeographic strategies.

89
1 See also: Victoria Vesna, “Art & Science, Relationships and Emergence,” in:
POST CITY, Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz p. 184
2 Full title of the category: [the next idea] voestalpine Art and Technology Grant
3 https://www.aec.at/prix/en/kategorien/hybrid-art/
4 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
5 Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab, in a conversation with the author, July 18, 2017.
6 Victoria Vesna, “Our Mission,” in: RETRO / SPECTIVE, A Decade of Intersections,
Art|Sci, Los Angeles, 2015, p. 1
http://artsci.ucla.edu/sites/artsci.ucla.edu/files/retrospective/01/mobile/index.html#p=4
7 Jurij Krpan, “Art & Science, The relationship that is not existing but yet it’s functioning,”
in: POST CITY, Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz p. 185
8 Jens Hauser, in a conversation with the author, June 28, 2017.
9 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
10 Fernando Comerón, ESO, in a conversation with the author, June 15, 2017.
11 https://www.aec.at/prix/en/collide/
12 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
13 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
14 http://arts.cern/julius-von-bismarck
15 http://arts.cern/bill-fontana
16 http://arts.cern/news/2014/japanese-artist-ryoji-ikeda-wins-third-prix-ars-electronica-
collidecern
17 Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab, in a conversation with the author, July 18, 2017.
18 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
19 Interview with María Ignacia Edwards by Magdalena Sick-Leitner, March 10, 2015,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2015/03/10/verbindung-von-poesie-und-mathematik/
20 Interview with Semiconductor by Magdalena Sick-Leitner, August 13, 2015,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2015/08/13/semiconductor
21 http://semiconductorfilms.com
22 https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2015/08/13/semiconductor
23 Interview with Quadrature by Martin Hieslmair, March 15, 2016, https://www.aec.at/
aeblog/en/2016/03/15/artandscience-quadrature/
24 https://vimeo.com/188180250
25 Interview with Aoife van Linden Tol by Claudia Mignone, March 2017, http://blogs.esa.int/
artscience/2017/03/24/stellar-start-for-aoife-van-linden-tol-s-residency/
26 Interview with Yen Tzu Chang by Martin Hieslmair, March 20, 2017,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2017/03/20/yen-tzu-chang/
27 Interview with Yen Tzu Chang by Martin Hieslmair, March 20, 2017,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2017/03/20/yen-tzu-chang/
28 Jurij Krpan, in a conversation with the author, June 26, 2017.
29 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
30 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
31 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
32 Jens Hauser, in a conversation with the author, June 28, 2017.
33 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
34 Fernando Comerón, ESO, in a conversation with the author, June 15, 2017.
35 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, has co-curated the residencies together
with Karen O’Flaherty, EJR-Quartz for ESA. The initiator at ESA was Mark McCaughrean,
Senior Advisor for Science & Exploration, ESA
36 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, in a conversation with the author,
June 19, 2017.
37 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
38 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.

90
39 Interview with María Ignacia Edwards by Magdalena Sick-Leitner, March 10, 2015,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2015/03/10/verbindung-von-poesie-und-mathematik/
40 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
41 Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS, in a conversation with the author, June 22, 2017.
42 Fernando Comerón, ESO, in a conversation with the author, June 15, 2017.
43 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
44 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, in a conversation with the author,
June 19, 2017.
45 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
46 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, in a conversation with the author,
June 23, 2017.
47 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
48 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, in a conversation with the author,
June 23, 2017.
49 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
50 Claudia Mignone, Vitrociset Belgium for ESA, in a conversation with the author,
June 19, 2017.
51 Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS, in a conversation with the author, June 22, 2017.
52 Jens Hauser, in a conversation with the author, June 28, 2017.
53 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
54 Krauss, Lawrence M., The Physics of Star Trek, 1995
55 Interview with Quadrature by Martin Hieslmair, March 15, 2016,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2016/03/15/artandscience-quadrature/
56 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
57 Dan Brown, Angels and Demons, New York, 2000, p. 17
58 http://angelsanddemons.web.cern.ch/
59 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
60 Rolf-Dieter Heuer, CERN, in a conversation with the author on July 17, 2017.
61 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.
62 Jurij Krpan, “Art & Science, The relationship that is not existing but yet it’s functioning,”
in: POST CITY, Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz, p. 185
63 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
64 Bianka Hofmann, Fraunhofer MEVIS, in a conversation with the author, June 22, 2017.
65 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20th 2017.
66 Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab, in a conversation with the author,
July 18, 2017.
67 Fernando Comerón, ESO, in a conversation with the author, June 15, 2017.
68 As quoted by John Brockman in the preface to his book What We Believe But Cannot
Prove: Today’s Leading Thinkers on Science in the Age of Certainty, New York, 2006:
“To arrive at the edge of the world’s knowledge, seek out the most complex and
interesting minds, put them in a room together, and have them ask each other the
questions they are asking themselves.”
69 Michael Doser, CERN, in a conversation with the author, June 21, 2017.
70 Interview with Quadrature by Martin Hieslmair, March 15, 2016,
https://www.aec.at/aeblog/en/2016/03/15/artandscience-quadrature/
71 Fernando Comerón, ESO, in a conversation with the author, June 15, 2017.
72 C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures, 1959. John Brockmann, The Third Culture, 1995.
73 Victoria Vesna, UCLA Art|Sci Center, in a conversation with the author, June 22, 2017.
74 Horst Hörtner, Ars Electronica Futurelab, in a conversation with the author, July 18, 2017.
75 Victoria Vesna, UCLA Art|Sci Center, in a conversation with the author, June 22, 2017.
76 Jurij Krpan, in a conversation with the author, June 26, 2017.
77 Gerfried Stocker, AEC, in a conversation with the author, June 20, 2017.

91
Jurij Krpan

Art&Science
The relationship that is not
existing but yet it’s functioning

The subtitle is taken from the notorious J. Lacan seminar: Encore,


1972–1973, where he introduced the non-biological, denaturalized sexual differ-
ence between a woman and a man and formalized it in the scandalous one-liner:
“There is no sexual relationship.” Being inspired with theoretizations of the
relationship between two genders, where theoretical psychoanalysis created the
gap between the sexes to be able to depict the inherent out-of-sync between
something that is apparent to everyone as being contingent.
With this inspirational quote in mind, I want to emphasize that the
Art&Science which is taken for granted and objectifies anything in arts that is
related to media, electronics, and other contemporary technology, is not a solid
praxis where art and science merge, but rather a dichotomy where one struggles
with the other. Conceptual difference between science as production of knowl-
edge and art as production of meaning, plus structural discrepancy between
linear thinking in science and non-linear (synchronous) comprehension, are
leading us to a number of possible approaches and intersections between the
two which may be tried out one by one or all together at the same time.
Being attracted by the ultimate questions—who we are, where we
come from, and where are we going as humankind, artists and scientists are
sharing the same field of metaphysical interest, but the way they approach these
ultimate questions are intrinsically different. If we are looking for a symmetrical
relationship between artists and scientists, we should look for a relationship
where the work of both are mutually inspirational. There are some mundane
examples where scientists can be inspired by artworks and artists can be inspired
by the scientific findings (sometimes still just concepts), but such inspirational
premises are never really smooth and uni-directional. There might be a case of
negative inspiration as well and also just an unscrupulous transposition of a
scientific experiment into a gallery or another art context.

92
The relationships between Art&Science might be asymmetrical and
abusive where artists are merely using knowledge, expertise, and tools that
scientists can provide them with for an art project, while scientists, on the other
side, can instrumentalize artists to draw and design visualizations of their findings
to communicate their complex scientific results better. In the art projects where
artists are problematizing and criticizing the effects of scientific findings and
technological applications on society, the science figures only as a relational
field. Artists are using materials, tools, and protocols that are typical for the
phenomena caused by scientific agents, in order to be more precise in their
thematizations. If I put it simply, artists can’t use the oil on canvas technique
when arguing about the effect that biotechnologies are having on the consumer-
istic ideology that proposes to design life as a product.
I might go on forever with descriptions of possible types of relation-
ships between artists and scientists, but the format of this short text enables me
to extend the whole discourse just inside this one-page essay. However, I believe,
it is enough to underline the impossibility of the Art&Science term, since there
is nothing that you can “point your finger at” and determine what Art&Science
precisely is. If I wrap up, there is no such thing as Art&Science, but yet it is
clear, that that dichotomy is producing extremely fruitful tensions. Exactly like
theoretical psychoanalysis enables us to understand the functioning of non-
existing relationships between the sexes, we should understand the dynamic
intersections between arts and science and shouldn’t be frustrated because
we see how “out-of-sync” the two practices are. The whole axiomatic statement
“There is no sexual relationship” has its rhetorical follow-up: “But yet it’s
functioning.”
First published in: POST CITY–Habitats for the 21st Century, Ars Electronica 2015, Hatje Cantz, p. 185

Jurij Krpan (SI), born in Postojna in 1961, lives and works in Ljubljana,
Slovenia. At the initiative of the Student Organization of the University of
Ljubljana, he conceived the Kapelica Gallery – Gallery for Contemporary
Investigative Arts, which he has been running since it was established
in 1995. As a curator and selector he has contributed to various domestic
and international festivals. In 2014 he co-curated the Designing Life section
for the Biennial of Design in Ljubljana and curated the Slovenian pavilion
at the Venice Biennale of Architecture. He started the year 2015 as an
appointed curator of the Freies Museum Berlin. Jurij Krpan lectures about the artistic profile
of the Kapelica Gallery in Slovenia as well as abroad.

93
Victoria Vesna

Anticipatory Art Science:


Networks to NanoSystems
Individual / Collective / Micro / Macro

“The further art advances


the closer it approaches science…
and the further science advances
the closer it approaches art.”
Leonardo da Vinci, quoted in R. Buckminster Fuller,
Nine Chains to the Moon, 1963

Things have sped up, everything is moving ever faster and what we
would have deemed impossible even 20 years ago is happening now. We are in
the midst of a major paradigm shift and are bound to land in a whole different
world sooner than we think. At this particular juncture, there is an urgency that is
collectively shared as reductionist models of science collapse, the established art
world caters to the wealthy few, and we are at a brink of an ecological disaster.
There is some hope however as we see more and more artists, scientists, and many
others seeking to blur the traditional disciplinary boundaries, and our youth are
rightfully demanding this in their education. The young Leonardos who will inherit
this planet need support and the tools to work with so they can survive and
prosper. Educational institutions around the world—for the arts, sciences, and
humanities—are leftovers from the Industrial Age mindset and the remaining
crystalized structures are difficult to shift. But we have no time to perpetuate the
old models as our world is on the brink of a collapse and we urgently need minds
from every discipline to come together and envision alternatives.

94
Divisions of people and disciplines inevitably lead to the creation of
stereotypes that contribute to perpetuating their separation, whether intentionally
or not. The current educational system is set up to develop these roles and, if one
is successful in understanding the archetypical image that is being summoned and
shapes him/herself accordingly, it strengthens the possibility of success in that
particular field. The problem of course is that gender and race cannot be shape-
shifted and so we have large segments of the creative population who do not fit
into the established stereotypic mold of the art and/or science worlds.

Bad Math Teacher / Bad Art Teacher


When I teach my Introduction to Art & Science course1, we always start
by sharing stories going back to the intersection on our educational path where we
had to make the decision—at the fork of two cultures. Science students often tell
stories of how they loved art or music but their parents would have never let them
pursue this as a serious study. Or, worse, an art teacher told them that they do not
have the talent for art. For many artists, including myself, there would be stories
about the awful chemistry or math classes. But, inevitably in everyone’s case there
was at least one good teacher who passed on his or her passion for a subject and
helped determine the path. From both sides, although we often try to fill the
educational gap, many give up and never cross over to the “other side.” We see this
now in the growth of the DIY movements and the growing number of workshops
outside of academia offering what is missing—mixing up the science lab, art, and
music studio practice. Add to that social media and “how to” online courses and
it is apparent that educational patterns are changing outside of academic walls.
A new generation of teachers will hopefully have the willpower to create the
environment that will prepare the youth for contemporary complexity.
At UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles), the large campus is
clearly divided geographically between the north side (arts and humanities) and
the south (engineering and science). Institutional divide is further amplified by the
distances, and students have to travel with their schedules jam-packed—even the
most energetic, more often than not, end up giving up. Students who attempt
interdisciplinary majors also have no roadmap and end up having to do twice the
work, if persistence prevails.
Traveling around the world and visiting many academic and research
institutions as well as art festivals and events, I have witnessed this same divide
everywhere. For instance, I was recently a guest professor at the Interface Culture
program2 of Linz University of Art and Design, teaching a lighter version of the
Introduction to Art & Science class to masters students. After everyone shared
their stories, I asked where the scientists in the University of Linz are and the
response was: “Across the river, at Kepler University.” This was so obviously
symbolic that the next day we packed up and crossed the river to enter the
sciences and also visit one of the student’s friends who works there in a
mechatronic lab. They were all amazed at how similar their interests are but it
was clear that, at this stage, it is still difficult to collaborate.

95
For many years, I separated my artwork from my parallel interest in
science. I produced and directed an award winning documentary, Unfolding the
Pyramids of Egypt Using Modern Physics (1988), conducted interviews with Nobel
Laureates such as Murray Gellman and Glenn Seaborg about their creative
process (1989), and directed a CD-ROM production of Life in the Universe with
Stephen Hawking (1996).3 I did not consider this part of my artwork and only
started connecting the two worlds in 2001 when I finally met a scientist who was
going to collaborate in earnest and not expect me to visualize his / her work.
Here I tell about a sequence of events that led me to pursue with passion art &
science in my work as well as in education. I elaborate on how a large exhibition,
NANO, determined my path and also was a precursor to the work that followed in
my own practice as an artist and educator.

Networks to Nanosystems

“I am quite sure we are going to get research


and development laboratories of education where the
faculty will become producers of extraordinary
moving-picture documentaries. That is going to be
the big, new educational trend.”
R. Buckminster Fuller, Education Automation, 1962

During my PhD studies, I was fortunate enough to meet Allegra


Snyder-Fuller who gave me access to the Buckminster Fuller archives,
auspiciously situated in Santa Barbara at the time. After our first meeting she
sent me a copy of Education Automation: Comprehensive Learning for Emergent
Humanity, a book written by her father who was a passionate believer in the
influence of information technology on education.4 The short book is a transcript
of a 22 April 1961 lecture, and preceded J. C. R. Licklider’s famed memos on
computer networks in 1962. As I delved further into his work, I learned about the
discovery of the third allotrope carbon, C60, and was particularly fascinated with
the story of how this molecule came to be named Buckminsterfullerene.5
Soon after 9/11, in November 2001, I organized a symposium entitled
Networks to NanoSystems: art, science & technology in times of crisis, in
coordination with my colleagues in the UC system6 and Roy Ascott’s Planetary
Collegium PhD student meeting and residency at UCLA7.
It was important for me to have at least one scientist who worked on
nanotechnology in the symposium and I had trouble finding someone who would
be interested in real dialogue. Luckily, a colleague and fan of Bucky Fuller,
Maroon Tabbal, told me about a scientist who had just arrived to campus from
IBM Zurich Research Laboratory—James Gimzewski. I sent him an email and was
surprised to get a quick and enthusiastic response. During his lecture I was
thrilled to find out that the IBM Zurich Lab he came from actually developed the
Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)8. But even though he worked with bucky-

96
balls, he did not know who Buckminster Fuller was or the story of the naming of the
C60, so this became the basis of our productive exchanges. We arrived at the same
point from the opposite sides of the pendulum—I was learning about the science
and he about the cultural background. After a year of sharing our ideas and
discussing philosophically, the pros and cons of this new science and the manipu-
lation of the molecular realm, zero@wavefunction: dreams and nightmares was
created.9 The project premiered at BEAP, Perth in 2002 and gave me an opportunity
to visit the SymbioticA art lab being set up in the biology department at the
University of Western Australia. It was inspiring to see artists, humanists, and
scientists sharing the same space exploring biotechnology.

NANO
Due to the successful buckyball installation, we were given a unique
opportunity by Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) to create an
“experimental space” or laboratory at the Boone’s Children’s Gallery. The museum
was confronted with a programming vacuum when a radical renovation proposed
by Rem Koolhaas fell through. Ironically, we enacted what he envisioned with the
NANO exhibition. In 2001, this is how his team described their proposal: “Once, all
continents formed a single whole. Then they drifted apart. We propose to undo
LACMA’s “continental” separation. Imagine an almost utopian condition where the
history of the arts can be told as a single and simultaneous narrative showing
moments of chronological coincidence, autonomy, influence, and convergence.
After decades where accommodating the “modern” led to a situation of glut and
fatigue, the idea of the all-embracing has a new appeal.”10
The chances of a museum allowing the kind of experimental exhibition
and series of events we staged with NANO in such a large space for close to
a year are to this day almost nonexistent. Usually their calendar is set years in
advance, and established names or topics are what are to be expected. But
we found ourselves in-between space and time and the opening became an
inspiration to develop a conceptual framework that would address the impact
of nanotechnology on culture and society. I set out to imagine a series of intercon-
nected installations that would play with scale and be activated by the audience’s
presence and interaction. Gimzewski and I worked closely together on imagining
the experiences and we invited theorist Katherine Hayles to join us. We had art,
science, and humanities working together and envisioning an interactive experi-
ence based on scale, dreams, and nightmares of nanotechnology.

Retreats, Residencies, Social Events


With a tight time frame and budget, we had to envisage and realize a
conceptual framework that would inspire others to join us. The three of us orga-
nized a series of “Sinaptic Blow-out” brainstorming meetings which included our
brightest graduate students. The retreats took place at a house on the Malibu Point

97
Dume State Beach with no agenda, and very quickly those who wanted a struc-
tured plan backed off. After a few sessions, the group that was left was composed
of people who really wanted to be there and got along on a human level. Profes-
sors, students, photographers, and friends were having fun envisioning installa-
tions while discussing at length social and cultural implications of this new
science.
These retreats were purposely outside the academic or gallery context
and were definitely the most productive way to initiate and develop such large
interdisciplinary projects. To this day, I organize those kind of social gatherings
when an ambitious project is about to come together. In collaborations that
span disciplines and different languages and methodologies, the human
connection is the most important creative glue. Inspiration is clear of disciplinary
programming.
During the year, we involved architects, theorists, designers, musicians,
choreographers, dancers, and engineers in the development of the exhibition.
Students from all areas were involved and it was like conducting an orchestra to
bring all the different sides together. Architects Johnston Marklee worked with us
to develop large structures based on Buckminster Fuller’s model of the Dymaxion
map. Using shapes that resemble molecular nanostructures, the folded three-
dimensional surfaces created interlocking layers of enclosed and semi-enclosed
“cells” and “sense spaces.” The entire space was designed to play with scale and
disturb our usual relationship to the material realm with unexpected behavioral
responses. At the entrance, the audience was confronted with many surveillance
cameras that captured their images and added into a growing number of pro-
jected hexagons over the ten months that the exhibition lasted. Entering the
center cell, one could manipulate buckyballs with ones shadows and the floor
consisted of a hexagonal projection that was responsive to the movements of
people walking as well as large robotic spheres that were being manipulated by
the audience remotely. This resembled the graphene single atomic layer before it
was discovered in 2010.11 People walked through a “quantum tunnel,” where two
identical mirrored spaces bounced granulated images and sound and when
another visitor passed through the tunnel connecting the two rooms, seemingly
non-sensical reflections and disturbances were created. Moving further, one
would enter a room with a bed of sand with a projection of a sand mandala which
evolved in scale from the molecular structure of a single grain to the recognizable
image of a Chakrasamvara mandala created by Tibetan monks in another part of
the museum.
NANO was open for a period of ten months and become a fertile space
for collaborations and experimentation. Katherine Hayles edited a book, Nano-
culture: Implications of the New Technoscience, written by her students who
participated in the process of the installation, wrote about the subject in it, and
contributed text to the exhibition.12 Dance PhD student Nora Zuniga-Shaw
together with choreographer Marianne M. Kim worked with master performers.
Harmony Bench choreographed a performance within the installations with
dancers wearing white clothes designed by fashion design students from Otis

98
design school under the eminent NY fashion designer Isabel Toledo.13 This
allowed the models to play with the installation projections and meld into the
environment. Together with Bucky aficionado Maroon Tabbal, we organized
public educational workshops at the museum that connected to the installations,
including a few evenings with DJs and parties around the installations. Hayles and
her students selected scientific, art, and sci-fi books related to the exhibition
theme and made them available to the public. Media arts, dance, fashion, music
nanotechnology, engineering, and humanities graduate students worked
together helping with the creation and installation where they learned through
experience while making strong peer connections. Anne Niemetz, an MFA
student working with me, staged within the installation her MFA project together
with PhD student Andrew Pelling in Gimzewski’s lab.14
NANO evolved as an emergent system as the outcome of a directed
self-organizational process and I started really believing in the importance of this
form of collective/collaborative work. It at once challenged the way both art and
science museums operate.
The experience of directing these collaborative artworks changed my
perception of what an artist working with large interactive installations can offer
in addition to the exhibition. It became a space where graduate students worked
together in the process of creation and also staged their own work, undergradu-
ates helped with the installation, learning in the process, and the public was
taught about the scientific concepts by the professor and students. But, most of
all, the children experienced all of the above without the art or science being
dumbed down. This was my prime motivation for envisioning the Art|Sci Center
in 2005 and two years later I designed the curriculum for the NanoLab Summer
Institute for high school students.

What do the Scientists get out of it?


This NANO exhibition was a major commitment for Gimzewski and his
students, taking a lot of time and energy. However he noted that those who
participated later went on to produce more publications and adopted a creative
side in their scientific research. Indeed, in later projects we collaborated on
publications that arose out of the synergetic relationship with the artwork.15 This
did not go unnoticed by other scientists on campus who started being more
open and engaging in dialogues with artists visiting the Art|Sci Center, inviting
them to their labs, and even delving into deeper collaborations. Today, we see
this trend having significant momentum in many science and art programs
becoming official and funding programs like the National Science Foundation
(NSF) in the US and the STARTS program established with the EU. This is all very
encouraging but still has to be approached cautiously as it can at times be
artificial in the connections made or superficial when not enough time is given to
allow the work to emerge naturally. Arranged marriages sometimes work but
generally lack the passion and dynamics of a relationship based on natural
attraction—and there is no formula for this, you just have to allow it to happen.

99
It is particularly encouraging to witness a new breed of young scien-
tists who have embraced art science collaborations early in their education.
When a senior professor encourages the students in their labs to be open to
working with artists and the center further promotes the work, we see compre-
hensive, creative scientists emerging. Another example is Takashi Ikegami, a
physicist from Tokyo University who I currently collaborate with on a highly
interdisciplinary and complex project initiated by evolutionary biologist Charles
Taylor16. Ikegami went a step further and invited sound art and philosophy
students to join his lab. He rightfully believes that this gives him a wider view on
his research into artificial life and other complex systems that do not operate
successfully in a sterile reductionist environment. Combined with institutions
such as Ars Electronica that promote and celebrate this approach, is clearly
a positive sign for the future. But most of all, we have to pay attention and
encourage the really young art scientists who are about to enter university.
There is still no solid curriculum that promotes art and science intersections
and unfortunately much still has to happen on the fringes in between and
outside of academia.

Sci|Art NanoLab

“There are children playing in the streets who


could solve some of my top problems in physics,
because they have modes of sensory perception that I
lost long ago.”
J. Robert Oppenheimer, 1967

By the time students are accepted into college, their expectations of


what academia offers as an educational environment has been set. NanoLab
program was designed for students at the intersection of the two cultures—just at
this critical point that determines their future educational path, recognizing that
it will take some time to change the academic structures. Our goal is to show the
students all the possibilities of how to navigate different disciplinary boundaries
and how to push the limitations of the existing system.
The teenage phase of life often involves risk seeking and irrational
behavior. This is an ideal time to focus that wild energy and include them in new
areas of exploration. I have experienced this first hand with my two daughters
who participated in many art installations and who particularly loved NANO.
Looking for suitable high school summer programs for them gave me the idea to
conceive a new program for students about to enter college. While developing
the curriculum, I had two honest and tough beta testers and I eventually devel-
oped a program that this summer is celebrating its tenth year. We contacted
some of the many students who went through our program to find out where
they eventually landed. Many went on to the medical professions, one is working
for Space X, and another is forming his own nanotechnology company. There is
no doubt that catching them early and showing them the possibilities of having a

100
wide angle lens and a divergent view while pursuing their studies in a research
university provides a key advantage later in life—no matter what path they
decide upon.
NanoLab is an intensive two-week program based on a college level
class that is normally taught in ten weeks. This means non-stop immersion in a
broad, comprehensive study that is not dumbed down, and students get college
credits that are transferable. Once established in 2007, Adam Stieg, who was at
the time a graduate student in Gimzewski’s lab and an active participant in NANO,
became the director.17 I continue to be involved with the planning and recruiting
students from Design Media Arts and Gimzewski and Stieg brought in graduate
students from the sciences. We team art and science graduate students and
guide them in developing their classes and workshops. This provides them with
an opportunity to learn from each other and it has strongly contributed to lasting
collaborations and the emergence of some great projects. Undergraduate
students are also called to task as counselors and helpers with their assignments.
This way they learn about various topics and how to take responsibility in the
running of the program.

“Students everywhere are confronted with


yesterday’s science fiction operating as today’s fact.”
R. Buckminster Fuller, I Seem to Be a Verb, 1970

NanoLab takes place at the California NanoSystems Institute and the


day begins at the auditorium with a lecture about a particular topic, typically
commencing with nanotechnology. This is followed by a hands-on workshop
where students build their own optical microscope using cheap webcams, and
they also learn about different imaging systems. After lunch, they go to visit
various imaging laboratories and see how scientists work with the Scanning
Tunneling Microscope (STM), Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM), and related
research tools including advance optical microscopes. After that, they hear a
lecture of a visiting artist who works with imaging technologies and are given a
hands-on demo. After dinner, they watch a sci-fi movie related to the same topic
and write about their impressions. Throughout the two weeks, science, art,
music, movie, and literature are interspersed and they very quickly understand
that only the methodology of development is what really separates these disci-
plines. We take them out to museums, the beach, and the LA river to test the
water quality and encourage their curiosity about their environment. After a week
of this kind of immersion, they are asked to self-organize into small groups and
develop project prototypes and proposals based on the science they learned
about and we ask them to imagine the “impossible.” Once their final projects are
presented, we tell them that they successfully created an “artwork” and if they
want to commit the time to make it a reality, they will be doing “science.” To
achieve this, they have to essentially invent their own methodology that is
peculiar to their vision rather than what is typically taught in science classes.
The methodology we teach is “Anything goes.”18

101
Face the Future now
The generation of youth growing up today is inheriting a world we are
not even able to imagine, so how do we prepare them for the uncertain future?
If we take a 100-year marker and briefly rewind our film back to 1917,
literacy was just 23%—today it is 80%, WW1 was raging, the Russian revolution
was in full swing, Kazimir Malevich presented the controversial white on white
painting, Marcel Duchamp exhibited the urinal as sculpture. Those works to this
day resonate and inform the art world. D’Arcy Thomson wrote Growth and
Form—a book still influential to biologists and artists alike; Einstein wrote his
famous paper that predicted stimulated emissions (beam of a laser) and we know
the massive applications in all walks of life; Freud came up with his ideas of the
unconscious—think of the subsequent advances in brain / consciousness
research. War technology was making fast progress through use of airplanes and
even gas attacks—now we have drone attacks and much more. In 1917, women
were fighting for the right to vote, only 6% of Americans graduated from high
school, now we are arguing whether artists should do a PhD. We had 1,9 billion
people on the planet, today it is 7,9 billion. It took three grueling months of travel
from London to New York, now we complain when the plane is an hour late. Ford
Motor Company was in full speed with the newly introduced idea of mass
assembly line production ushering in the car as transportation available to the
middle classes. Today electrical cars are finally hitting the road in large numbers.
In parallel to all this creative innovative art, science and technology,
multiple political events occurred in 1917. Europe’s Great War was transformed
into the First World War, America entered the stage, Asia was mobilized, Mahatma
Gandhi and his followers established the first experiment in self-rule, and with
Lenin’s coup, an entirely new ideological politics and geopolitical order emerged.
The overthrow of the tsar in Russia triggered a wave of sympathy around the
world and this year had a moment of democratic, not socialist, excitement.19
Growing up with a father who was a diplomat for former Yugoslavia, I
was bounced around from Washington D.C. to Belgrade, to Jakarta to New York
City by the time I was twelve. At each location I was taught a different version of
World War II history and quickly realized that these were stories told from differ-
ent global and political perspectives. But, one thing is for sure—no one could
have predicted how the world changed and the direction we collectively took
over the course of the last hundred years. We first saw our planet from a distance
in 1969—that is not that long ago. That same year we made the first network
connection from UCLA to UCSB and Stanford with the first message “LO,” starting
the process of communication across the globe and slowly becoming world
citizens.
We feel something brewing, we are in the midst of a paradigm shift and
the wave is already sweeping us along. The icebergs are melting and many are
ignoring the alarm sounds of the scientific community predicting environmental
disasters upon us, or the potential dangers of artificial intelligence. All of us are
anticipating a new era with CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology promising

102
to reprogram life as we know it. New developments in artificial intelligence,
artificial life, robotics, sensors, networks, synthetic biology, materials science,
space exploration, and more knowledge about our brain, mind, and conscious-
ness appear every day. However, every great proposition has an equally great
opposition and the world is polarized more than ever on a global level.
Many of the things we discuss when it comes to education and aca-
demia are not even an issue with today’s youth. We can see this happening all
over with an ever growing number of workshops and DIY meet ups offered by
young artists and scientists and the new generation that grew up around art,
science, and technology. A good example is seen in the children growing up in
Linz who are exposed to cutting edge art installations and science through Ars
Electronica. One example is the young artist, Lisa Buttinger (born 1997), who
received the Golden Nica of Prix Ars Electronica u19 category and the STARTS
Prize Honorary Mention this year. Seemingly effortlessly she combined her
knowledge of natural sciences with an artistic output and created a work that is
surprisingly mature. Seeing these young Leonardos working on creative projects
gives us hope for the future as we can anticipate the third culture truly emerging
with no disciplinary separation as we know it. The main challenge is to avoid
having them caught up in the de-geniusing machines of yesterday.
Neuroscientists agree that we use around 5% of our brain and that
most of what we do is actually unconscious, although some even believe it’s
closer to 1–2%. Regardless, it is clear that scientists are faced with increasing
complexity that cannot be addressed with traditional methodologies. This is the
important role that artists can play as the few that are trained to think in compre-
hensive ways. As Anticipatory Design / Art Scientists, we can put up what John
Cage calls our “antennae to the future” and present to the world alternate visions,
counter to what is being fed through our media daily. It is an exciting time, it is a
dangerous time, certainly unpredictable but we can anticipate and prepare
ourselves. Dramatic shifts can happen in a nanosecond—this is the nature of
self-organized criticality.20

Victoria Vesna (US) is an artist and a professor at the UCLA Department


of Design Media Arts and Director of the UCLA Art|Sci Center. With her
installations she investigates how communication technologies affect
collective behavior and perceptions of identity shift in relation to scientific
innovation (PhD, University of Wales, 2000). Her work involves long-term
collaborations with composers, nano-scientists, neuroscientists, and
evolutionary biologists, and she brings this experience to students. Since
1997, she is a speaker at Ars Electronica symposia, has served as a juror
several times, and in 2017 she showed Bird Song Diamond at Deep Space and curated the
Campus Exhibition.

103
1. Introduction to Art & Science in the UCLA Department of Design Media Arts course
started as a large General Education lecture course in 2006 and gradually shifted to
an online hybrid class. Students from every discipline imaginable take this class and
participate in the events organized by the Art|Sci Center giving them an opportunity
to meet in a more relaxed social environment. Because of its wide outreach, I consider
this course an important aspect of shifting away from the two-culture divide on
campus.
2. The Interface Culture program at University of Art and Design Linz, Department of Media
was founded in 2004 by Christa Sommerer and Laurent Mignonneau. Sommerer received
her PhD from Ascott’s Planetary Collegium in 2002.
3. In parallel to exhibiting my artwork, I was making a living as a video producer and
focused on scientific content for a period of 10 years—1987-97. Life in the Universe
with Stephen Hawking CD-ROM—art direction and production, UC Santa Barbara in
collaboration with MetaTools Inc. 1996, (unpublished); The Internal Language of
the Brain Translated into Music. Video (produced and edited) Xiadong Leng and Gordon
Shaw, University of California Irvine, 1993, (unpublished); System for Aneutronic Fusion
Energy (S.A.F.E.). UCI / Advanced Physics Corp, 1992 (unpublished); Discovery of
Strangeness. Dr. Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel Laureate, 1989, (unpublished); The Science
of Preventing Wars.The Physicist Who Changed Gorbachev’s Mind (unpublished);
Biochemistry of Emotions. Norman Cousins, 1989, (unpublished); Unfolding the Pyramids’
Secrets Using Modern Physics, directed by Victoria Vesna and awarded a CINE Golden
Eagle for Best Science Documentary, 1988, (unpublished). Produced by the Tesla
foundation.
4. “Education Automation on Spaceship Earth: Buckminster Fuller’s Vision. More Relevant
than Ever.” Allegra Fuller Snyder and Victoria Vesna. In Leonardo, Vol. 31, No. 4 (1998), pp.
289-292, MIT Press.
5. Buckminsterfullerene discovered by Harold Kroto, James Heath, and Richard Smalley in
1985. One of his designs of a geodesic dome structure bears great resemblance to C60;
as a result, the discoverers of the allotrope named the newfound molecule after him. The
general public, however, sometimes refers to buckminsterfullerene, and even Fuller’s
dome structure, as buckyballs. See ”Naming of Buckminsterfullerene by E.J. Applewhite,”
in The Chemical Intelligencer, July, 1995 (Vol. 1, No. 3)
6. UC DARNET – University of California Digital Arts Research Network was a collective of
media artists and professors in the UC system – UC Berkeley, Santa Cruz, Davis, Los
Angeles, Irvine, Riverside and Sand Diego (1997-2009).
7. The Planetary Collegium was first established as the Centre for Advanced Inquiry in
the Interactive Arts (CAiiA) by Roy Ascott in 1994 at what is now the University of Wales,
Newport. I was one of the first five PhD students along with Jill Scott, Bill Seaman,
Miroslaw Rogala, and Joseph Nechvatal (1996-2000). In 2003, Ascott relocated the
platform to Plymouth University, renaming it the Planetary Collegium, where it is now
located in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities. Over 80 doctoral candidates have
graduated.
8. A Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) is an instrument for imaging surfaces at the
atomic level. Its development in 1981 earned its inventors, Gerd Binnig and Heinrich
Rohrer at IBM Zurich, the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986. Gimzewski pioneered research
on mechanical and electrical contacts with single atoms and molecules using scanning
tunneling microscopy (STM) and was one of the first persons to image molecules
with STM.

104
9. Zero@wavefunction as described in 2001 in the exhibition catalog at BEAP festival in
Perth, Australia: “Zerowave explores the dreams, nightmares and visions in a manner
similar to quantum mechanics. The particle that penetrates the quantum wall has a
probability to reflect to transmit through the barrier with a zillion possible outcomes in
between. To the artist and the scientist this becomes the magnetic realm worthy of
exploration. It is a set of wave functions of human existence, of technology and science
woven together in a dynamically transforming landscape with probabilities of Being
and Non-Being, of Time and No time. The project represents an exploration of the
unpredictable where both artist and scientist are willing to be conceptually changed
in their vision, hopes and fears.”
10. OMA office work website: http://oma.eu/projects/lacma-extension

11. Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov received a Nobel Prize in Physics for their
discovery of a thin flake of ordinary carbon, just one atom thick. They have shown that
carbon in such a flat form has exceptional properties that originate from the remarkable
world of quantum physics.
12. Hayles, Katherine, ed. Nanoculture: Implications of the New Technoscience.
Intellect books, UK, 2004.
13. I was invited to work together with fashion designer Isabel Toledo as part of the
mentorship program in the Otis School of Design in Los Angeles. The dresses produced
by students were part of the NANO exhibition as well as an annual fashion show at the
Beverly Hilton hotel. https://www.otis.edu/fashion-design/past-mentors
14. Dark Side of the Cell premiered at the LACMA as part of the NANO installation and was
Anne Niemetz’s final MFA project. It was based on Gimzewski’s research showing that
yeast cells oscillate at the nanoscale. Andrew Pelling, PhD student in his lab, amplified the
oscillations making them audible and Anne created an installation inspired by the cellular
tensile structures. http://www.darksideofcell.info/about.html
15. Co-authored with Gimzewski in relation to the exhibition: “The Nanomeme Syndrome:
Blurring of fact and fiction in the construction of new science.” Technoetic Arts journal,
May, 2003 “NANO: An Exhibition of Scale and Senses.” Leonardo Vol. 38, Issue 4,
August 2005.
16. Mapping the Acoustic Network of Birds is a research project that was funded by the
National Science Foundation and the art project that emerged is Bird Song Diamond.
The leaders of this large and complex collaborations are evolutionary biologist Charles
Taylor, artist Victoria Vesna, physicist Takashi Ikegami, and engineer Hiroo Iwata.
http://birdsongdiamond.com
17. Adam Stieg directed the program until 2015 when he assumed additional research
responsibilities at California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI). He is still involved in an
advisory role.
18. “Anything goes”—I refer here to Feyerabend’s Against Method: Outline of an Anarchistic
Theory of Knowledge in which he defends the idea that there are no methodological
rules always used by scientists. In his view, science would benefit most from a “dose” of
theoretical anarchism. University of Minnesota Press, 1975
19. “1917—365 days that shook the world,” by Adam Tooze / December 13, 2016. Prospect
Magazine, January 2017. https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/1917-year-
shook-the-world-russian-revolution-united-states
20. “Self-Organized Criticality and Emergence in Dynamical Systems,” James K. Gimzewski,
Adam Z. Stieg, Victoria Vesna. Handbook of Science and Technology Convergence.
Springer International, 2015, pp. 163–180

105
Horst Hörtner

Art, Technology,
and Society as
Research Practice
Ars Electronica Futurelab

Ars Electronica Futurelab, a laboratory and an atelier in which artists,


engineers, designers, and scientists work together on creative and innovative
ideas and prototypes, is an indispensable and vital part of Ars Electronica’s
creative ecosystem. Developed by the team with which we built the first
Ars Electronica Center in 1995/96, it soon became a successful part of our
organization, not only working for the Festival and the Center but collaborating
as well with universities, business, and industry from all over the world.
By 2012, Futurelab had already grown to more than 50 full-time
employees and, to allow for further growth without compromising the creative
spirit, we made a spin off of Futurelab and founded Ars Electronica Solutions.
Since then, Futurelab is concentrating on artistic development, technology-
oriented research co-operation, and creative consulting, while Solutions has
taken over the market-oriented realization of creative applications. With their
successful projects and collaborations, both areas play an important role in
the overall financing of Ars Electronica.
From the outset we knew that Ars Electronica could only forge new
directions with the city of Linz if it was not just a place for presentation but also a
place for production and creation. We wanted to inspire not just with words but
also with real projects. Initially we faced some skeptical questions about the
necessity of such a laboratory. The city agreed, but stipulated that Futurelab
would have to be self-financing through co-operations and commissioned
projects. Given the team’s high level of competence in areas like VR, Interactive
Interfaces, and the successful exhibitions at Ars Electronica Center as an
attractive showcase and reference, clients from industry and research were
soon found and Futurelab was established.

106
So we got our own think tank and production facility that we needed
for the continually evolving development of Ars Electronica, plus the opportunity
to reach out and work with the economy, local businesses, and entrepreneurs
from the city and the region.
The strong anchoring in the artistic field at Ars Electronica Festival and
Prix Ars Electronica guarantees that Futurelab will never become just technology
and profit-oriented. A very characteristic constellation emerged of the same
teams working on both the industrial projects and the art projects. The mutual
experience gained from these collaborations and the response that we get from
daily visitors to the Center have built up intensive competence for the design of
interfaces and communication between humans and technical systems. This
competence is gained equally from the artistic sensitivity to the human factors as
well as from the experience of concrete project work with industry and research.
The augmented reality car navigation system already realized in 2002
and exciting cooperations with Honda’s Asimo Team and Daimler with their
prototype of a self-driving Mercedes Benz are just a few examples of how the
artistic point of view can change the focus from technical solutions to a
human-centered approach. The innovations resulting from such collaborations
impressively demonstrate the potential of artistic participation.
Many members of Futurelab also teach at universities, work as artists,
and share their knowledge while the international artists in residence bring in a
constant flow of new ideas and know-how. And it has become very clear over the
years that creative and innovative powers need to be continually renewed and
replenished. We also need to understand the importance of art itself. Without
work dedicated entirely to artistic concerns, this source of all creative energies
would soon dry up.

Ars Electronica Residency Network


Futurelab has a worldwide network of collaborating partners and the
Ars Electronica Residency Network (AERN) represents the successful attempt to
formalize this network, offering extraordinary opportunities and challenges for
artists and scientists, as well as partner institutions, through residency programs.
AERN helps to create optimal conditions for the selected person-in-residence,
providing fruitful encounters for the project work during the residency in order to
achieve the best possible results. The residency may take place on the partner’s
premises, with optional research and development stays at the Ars Electronica
Futurelab, or exclusively at the Ars Electronica Futurelab—depending on the
nature of the pioneering work. At the heart of AERN is transdisciplinary research
and artistic development, supported by the special competence of the Ars
Electronica Futurelab to work in this field. The scope of the programs and
projects is spread across disciplines and reflects the cultural and institutional
background of the partners and residents.

107
The joint residencies within the framework of the EU funded program
European Digital Art & Science Network are part of Ars Electronica’s residency
activities. It supports artists to develop their practice through access to one-of-
a-kind scientific institutions, research facilities, as well as latest technological
developments. It facilitates interdisciplinary artistic research and enables inter-
disciplinary collaboration in a worldwide network of scientists, researchers,
engineers, innovators, and artists. Moreover, based in Ars Electronica’s core
interest, artists are also encouraged to embed their work in the wider context
of society.
The vivid exchange with Futurelab experts is a fertile ground for artists
in residence with out-of-the box thinking. Having been inspired and having
developed an idea for their stay, they’ll get further input and insight into the
unorthodox workflow and collaborations of Ars Electronica Futurelab’s innovative
staff. It is no isolated incident if an artist in residence is inspired by the exchange
of ideas to alter their plans and aspire to a different result. The lab is also the
place where artists find an ideal studio equipped with state of the art technology
and enough space to expand ideas. Having brilliant artists in residence is a
win-win situation; Futurelab benefits from outside perspectives. The think tank
tackles various research topics that have added up to a bold list of applied
future science, such as creative catalyst, functional aesthetics, information
aesthetics, interaction ecology, robo psychology, and media art in architecture
among others.
The residency programs and projects are presented during the Ars
Electronica Festival, with Ars Electronica providing the necessary infrastructure
for the presentation of the project results.

Horst Hörtner (AT) is a media artist and researcher. He is an expert in the


design of human-computer interaction and holds several patents in this field.
He started to work in the field of media art in the 1980s and co-founded the
media art group x-space in Graz, Austria in 1990. Hörtner was a founding
member of Ars Electronica Futurelab in 1996 and since then he has been the
director of this atelier/laboratory. He holds the position as a Conjoint
Professor at the University of Newcastle, Australia. In his research Hörtner
focuses on swarm behavior. Together with an interdisciplinary team of
experts he has been developing SPAXELS® performances since 2012.
SPAXELS® (=Space+Pixel) are visual elements positioned freely and dynamically in space. For this
purpose drones with an LED lighting system are used and combined into a beautiful and organic
swarm of airborne lights.

108
109
European Digital Art and Science Network

Cultural Partners

110
Ars Electronica (AT) to experiments through to creation, involving
has created an a wide range of disciplines and skills. This
ecosystem for innovation. This ecosystem not ecosystem evolves around the triangle of
only supports and enables a wide range of Art, Technology and Society that was coined
artistic developments and achievements, for the first Ars Electronica Festival in 1979
it also allows for pioneering technological and has since developed to encompass a
developments because it replicates the whole spectrum of activities. www.aec.at
artistic thinking process from inspiration

Centre for the promotion together, provides help and supports all
of science (RS): Promotion science popularization organizations and
of science is one of the initiatives throughout Serbia. Special attention
major tasks for every is given to the cooperation with scientific
European country. In this field, the Centre institutions—the Serbian Academy of
for the Promotion of Science is already actively Sciences and Arts in the first place, but
engaged in bringing science community also with leading scientific institutes and
closer to a larger public, with the ambition all universities in the country. www.cpn.rs
to become the top institution that binds

DIG gallery (SK) is the alternative in general. DIG gallery collaborates with
platform for presentation of the several institutions and independent initia-
contemporary forms of digital tives within the interdisciplinary research,
and media arts. Activities of DIG alternative education and partnership
gallery are focused on mapping networks. DIG gallery was founded by DIG
and popularization of this area, developing non-profit organization in 2012 as a model
the local and international connectivity, of the open-source gallery based in Košice.
supporting the artistic practice and creativity diggallery.sk

Zaragoza City of Knowledge Ars Electronica), to promote technology-based


Foundation (ES) is an independent creativity in the public space / Innovate!
public-private organization which Europe (an European event on startup
is in charge of the program for the culture) / Das Detroit Projekt (coordinated by
Etopia Center for Art & Technology. According Schauspielhaus Bochum). Zaragoza City of
with this mission they developed some inter- Knowledge Foundation has also been quite
esting projects with international scope, active in participating in events and projects
providing a valuable experience to the of the European Union, specially in the field
Foundation. The most relevant of them of smart cities initiatives, urban innovation
are: Paseo Project (in collaboration with and Future Internet PPP. www.fundacionzcc.org

111
GV Art (UK) is the UK’s lead- dialogue focused on how modern society
ing contemporary art gallery interprets and understands the advances
which aims to explore and in both areas and how an overlap in the
acknowledge the inter-relationship between technological and the creative, the medical
art and science, and how the areas cross over and the historical are paving the way for new
and inform one another. The gallery curates aesthetic sensibilities to develop.
exhibitions and events that stimulate a www.gvart.co.uk

Kapelica Gallery / research. The gallery presents works of artists


Kersnikova Institute (SI): that dare to go beyond safe and pleasant
Kapelica Gallery was themes and are challenging visitors to con-
established in 1995 as template and wonder with them. Together
an art space with focus on Contemporary with BioTehna wet lab Kapelica is an active
Investigative Arts and a production platform production platform which encourages,
for research, investigation and experimenting facilitates and showcases investigative
with the limits of artistic discourses and art artistic production, create public debate
poetics. Kapelica art program is constituted and stimulates a critical understanding of
by exhibitions, performances and artistic the time we live in. www.kapelica.org

LABoral (ES) is a multidis- exchange amongst professionals from


ciplinary institution which different disciplines with a common objective.
produces, disseminates In this context, the collaboration with all
and fosters access to new forms of culture these professionals has always been a
rooted in the creative use of information and new challenge, due to the differences and
communication technologies (ICT). LABoral similarities between practices. Thus, this
has been working in crossovers between arts, experience is to be shared, agreed and
science and technology since its creation formalized, with similar hybrid institutions
in 2007. The hybrid nature of the institution through the production of various research
is seen through its focus on production, a projects and related activities.
practice that involves an intense knowledge www.laboralcentrodearte.org

Science Gallery (IE) is an simulation of a pandemic using RFID


organisation dedicated to technology. Science Gallery is ranked
igniting creativity and discovery amongst the top ten free cultural attractions
where science and art collide. Science in Ireland and is all about opening science
Gallery, since opening in February 2008, up to passionate debate. Uniquely located
has welcomed over a million visitors with in Ireland’s leading research university,
over 24 exhibitions ranging from EDIBLE, Trinity College Dublin, with a recognized
which examined the future of food, to expertise in astro physics and astronomy
BIO-RHYTHM, which got to grips with music as well as a focus on public engagement
and the body, to INFECTIOUS, an exhibition with creative science, art and design.
which showcased the first ever live dublin.sciencegallery.com

112
… and Activities

113
Ars Electronica
Linz, Austria

An Innovative Ecosystem for Art,


Technology and Society

Ein innovatives Ökosystem für Kunst,


Technologie und Gesellschaft

114
Ars Electronica has created an ecosystem Ars Electronica hat ein Ökosystem für Innovation
for innovation. This ecosystem not only geschaffen, das nicht nur ein breites Spektrum an
supports and enables a wide range of künstlerischen Entwicklungen und Projekten
artistic developments and achievements, unterstützt und ermöglicht, sondern auch
it also allows for pioneering technological bahnbrechende technologische Entwicklungen
developments because it replicates the fördert. Unter Einbeziehung der unterschied-
artistic thinking process from inspiration to lichsten Disziplinen und Fertigkeiten repliziert
experiments through to creation, involving es dabei die künstlerische Herangehensweise
a wide range of disciplines and skills. This – von der Inspiration übers Experiment bis hin zur
ecosystem evolves around the triangle of Implementierung. Dieses Ökosystem bewegt sich
Art, Technology and Society that was coined im Spannungsfeld von Kunst, Technologie und
for the first Ars Electronica Festival in 1979 Gesellschaft. Das Konzept dafür wurde für das
and has since developed to encompass a erste Ars Electronica Festival 1979 formuliert und
whole spectrum of activities. seitdem stark weiterentwickelt, sodass es mittler-
At the annual Ars Electronica Festival every weile eine große Vielfalt von Aktivitäten umfasst.
September, we bring together artists and Das jährlich im September stattfindende
scientists, creators and engineers, activists Ars Electronica Festival bringt KünstlerInnen
and economists from all over the globe to und Kreative, VertreterInnen aus Wissenschaft,
present their work and their visions of the Forschung, Technologie und Wirtschaft aus der
future. It’s a great feast of eclectic, ganzen Welt zusammen, um ihre Arbeit und ihre
enchanting, intriguing and captivating Vision von der Zukunft zu präsentieren. Es bietet
creations, a unique environment of intense eine Bühne für eklektische, faszinierende und
discussions and inspiring encounters. überraschende kreative Arbeiten und ein einzig-
Prix Ars Electronica is the world’s most artiges Umfeld für intensive Diskussionen und
highly regarded award for artists working inspirierende Begegnungen.
in science and technology. About 4,000 Der Prix Ars Electronica ist der international
submissions from more than 100 countries renommierteste Preis für Künstler und
each year impressively document the Künstlerinnen, die im Bereich von Wissenschaft
dynamics of international media art. The und Technologie tätig sind. Die rund 4.000
presentations of the awarded projects and Einreichungen aus mehr als 100 Ländern, die
artists are special highlights of each Ars jedes Jahr am Wettbewerb teilnehmen, zeugen
Electronica Festival. von der Dynamik der internationalen Medien-
Ars Electronica Center with its exhibitions kunst. Die Präsentation der prämierten Projekte
and programs focuses all year long on und KünstlerInnen ist ein spezielles Highlight
educating people about how new technolo- während des Ars Electronica Festivals.
gies and sciences are changing their Das Ars Electronica Center mit seinen Pro-
lives as well as engaging them in the grammen hat es sich zur Aufgabe gemacht, dem
process through interactive displays and Publikum mittels interaktiver, erlebnisorientierter
experiences. Special education programs Austellungen zu vermitteln, wie neue Technolo-
and workshops have earned the Center its gien und Wissenschaften sich unmittelbar auf
reputation as a ”School of the Future.“ unser Leben auswirken. Dank spezieller Bildungs-
www.aec.at programme und Workshops hat sich das Center
das Prädikat „Schule der Zukunft“ erworben.
www.aec.at

115
The powerful pillar for research and Forschung und Entwicklung findet im Ars
development is Ars Electronica Futurelab, Electronica Futurelab statt, das eine tragende
a place of inspiration and creative ideas, Rolle innerhalb Ars Eletronica einnimmt. Es
where artists, engineers, and developers ist ein Ort für inspirierende, kreative Ideen, an
team up to work together from the outset dem KünstlerInnen, IngenieurInnen und
on art projects as well as commissioned EntwicklerInnen von Anfang an in Teams an
research projects. künstlerischen Projekten arbeiten, aber auch
The two spin-offs of the Futurelab, Ars Auftragsforschung durchführen.
Electronica Solutions and Ars Electronica Zwei Spin-offs des Futurelab, Ars Electronica
Spaxels, bring the creations and prototypes Solutions und Ars Electronica Spaxels, bringen
that emerge from this ecosystem to the die Prototypen und Kreationen, die dieses
market and support local industry and Ökosystem hervorbringt, zur Marktreife. Sie
business in their development of new unterstützen die lokale Industrie und Wirtschaft
products and services. bei der Entwicklung neuer Produkte und
u19–CREATE YOUR WORLD is the name of Dienstleistungen.
Ars Electronica’s exciting programs for and u19 – CREATE YOUR WORLD umfasst eine
with young creators. Since 1998 we Vielfalt an aufregenden Programmen für und mit
celebrate and support the creative and jungen Kreativen. Seit 1998 unterstützt Ars
innovative ideas of young people and their Electronica die erfindungsreichen, innovativen
visions for the world of tomorrow. Ideen junger Menschen und ihre Visionen einer
Based on its big international network of zukünftigen Welt.
artists and creators and the rich experience Dank des großen internationalen Netzwerkes
of curating and producing festivals and aus KünstlerInnen und ForscherInnen sowie der
exhibitions, Ars Electronica has become an reichen Erfahrung bei der Kuratierung und
attractive collaborator for many museums, Produktion von Festivals und Ausstellungen
festivals, and exhibition venues worldwide. ist Ars Electronica zu einem attraktiven
Under the name Ars Electronica Export we Kooperationspartner für viele Museen, Festivals
realize exhibitions and workshop programs und Ausstellungsorte weltweit geworden. Unter
worldwide, each custom-tailored for our dem Label Ars Electronica Export realisieren
partners. wir maßgeschneiderte Ausstellungen und
With a permanent presence and activities in Workshopprogramme auf der ganzen Welt.
Tokyo and Osaka, Ars Electronica Japan is Dank einer permanenten Präsenz in Tokio und
engaged in artistic projects, collaborations Osaka ist Ars Electronica Japan an künstleri-
with universities and museums as well as schen Projekten, Kollaborationen mit Universitä-
research, development, and consulting ten und Museen beteiligt. Im Bereich Forschung
projects with many Japanese leading & Entwicklung sowie Consulting arbeitet Ars
companies. Electronica Japan mit führenden japanischen
The development and practical evaluation of Firmen zusammen.
new innovative methods and technologies Die Entwicklung und praktische Evaluierung
for education and knowledge transfer with neuer, innovativer Methoden und Technologien
special consideration of new digital media, für Bildung und Wissenstransfer unter besonde-
is the goal of Ars Electronica Education. rer Berücksichtigung neuer digitaler Medien ist
The applications range from kindergarten das Ziel von Ars Electronica Education. Die
and schools to special programs for Applikationen reichen von Kindergarten- und
universities and professional training and Schulniveau bis hin zu speziellen Programmen
qualification services for business and für Universitäten, zu professionellem Training
industry. und Qualifizierungsservices für Betriebe.
Ars Electronica Archive is a remarkable Das Ars Electronica Archiv versammelt Text-
collection of descriptions and documenta- und Dokumentationsmaterial zu über 75.000
tions of more than 75.000 projects linked Projekten im Zusammenhang mit Ars Electronica
with Ars Electronica since 1979, a unique und bietet eine einzigartige Möglichkeit, den
opportunity to research the cultural impact kulturellen Impakt der digitalen Revolution seit
of the digital revolution. 1979 zu erforschen.

116
Ars Electronica, Linz
Activities

Conferences Prix Ars Electronica Forum


Art & Science
POST CITY Symposium I Conference
Future Mobility – A Challenge for Central
Art & Science 09.09.2016
Conference Prix Forum I – Computer Animation/Film/VFX
Post City, conference square Gerfried Stocker (AT), Jürgen Hagler (AT),
04.09.2015 Boris Labbé (FR), Yuya Hanai (JP), Mari-Liis
Alexander Mankowsky (DE), Martina Rebane (EE), Johannes Schiehsl (AT)
Mara (AT), Shunji Yamanaka (JP),
Takayuki Furuta (JP), Kilian Prix Ars Electronica Forum
Kleinschmidt (DE), Ou Ning (CN), Art & Science
Hiroshi Ishii (JP/US), Gerfried Conference
Stocker (AT) Ursulinensaal, OK, OÖ Kulturquartier 
10.09.2016
Prix Forum VI Prix Forum II – Digital Communities
Art & Science Round Table Stacco Troncoso (ES), Paul Feigelfeld (AT),
Conference Caoimhe Gallagher (IR), Nakano Hitoyo (JP),
Ursulinensaal, OÖ Kulturquartier Sarah Kriesche (AT)
05.09.2015
Fernando Comerón (ES), Victoria Prix Ars Electronica Forum
Vesna (US), Mónica Bello (ES), Art & Science
Michael Doser (AT), Jurij Krpan (SI), Conference
Jens Hauser (DE), Nahum (MX), Ursulinensaal, OK, OÖ Kulturquartier 
Ale de la Puente (MX) 10.09.2016
Prix Forum III – Interactive Art+
European Digital Art and Science Mathias Jud (CH), Christoph
Network Meeting Wachter (CH), Frank Kolkmann (NL),
Conference Victoria Vesna (US)
Post City, conference square
06.09.2015 Prix Ars Electronica Forum
Lale Eric Dobrivoje (Center for the Art & Science
Promotion of Science/SR), Richard Conference
Kitta (DIG Gallery/SK), José Carlos Ursulinensaal, OK, OÖ Kulturquartier 
Arnal (Zaragoza City of Knowledge 10.09.2016
Foundation/ES), Jurij Krpan (Kapelica Prix Forum IV – Visionary Pioneers
Gallery/Kersnikova, SI), Robert of Media Art
Devcic (GV Art/UK), Lucía García Jasia Reichardt (UK),
(LABoral/ES) and Diane McSweeney Christine Schöpf (AT)
(Science Gallery/IE)

117
RADICAL ATOMS Symposium RADICAL ATOMS Symposium
Conference Conference
POSTCITY, Conference Hall  POSTCITY, Conference Hall 
09.09.2016 11.09.2016
SYMPOSIUM I.I. SYMPOSIUM III: ART AND SCIENCE
RADICAL ATOMS – FROM VISION AT WORK
TO PRACTICE Session1: EUROPEAN DIGITAL ART
Gerfried Stocker (AT), Hiroshi AND SCIENCE NETWORK
Ishii (US/JP), Daniel Leithinger (AT), Session 2: ESTABLISHING BEST PRACTICE
Sean Follmer (US), Ken Nakagaki (JP), Session 3: EXPLORING NEW FRONTIERS
Luke Vink (NZ/NL), Amanda Parkes (US), Session 4: DISCUSSING THE FUTURE
Lining Yao (CN/US), Joe Paradiso (US), OF THE LABS
Jifei Ou (CN), Dávid Lakatos (HU)

RADICAL ATOMS Symposium


Conference Exhibitions
POSTCITY, FIS Stage 
10.09.2016 ELEMENTS OF ART AND SCIENCE
SYMPOSIUM I.II. Exhibition
RADICAL ATOMS – IMPACT Ars Electronica Center
AND EXPECTATIONS 03.09.2015 – 30.08.2016
Hiroshi Ishii (US/JP), Christopher see Page 120
Lindinger (AT), Carlo Ratti (IT),
Joachim Sauter (DE), Tomotaka THE ALCHEMISTS OF ART AND SCIENCE
Takahashi (JP), Horst Hörtner (AT), Exhibition
Martina Mara (AT), Yoichi Ochiai (JP), Ars Electronica Center
Chiaki Hayashi (JP), Shiho Fukuhara (JP), 08.09.2016 – 30.08.2017
David Benjamin (US) see Page 138

RADICAL ATOMS Symposium RADICAL ATOMS


Conference Exhibition
POSTCITY, Conference Hall  Ars Electronica Center
09.09.2016 07.09.2016 – 15.07.2017
SYMPOSIUM II see Page 154
THE ALCHEMISTS OF OUR TIME
Jurij Krpan (SI), Joe Davis (US),
Siegfried Zielinski (DE), Verena
Kuni (DE), Fumio Nanjo (JP),
James Gimzewski (US)

118
Jury Meetings Residency@ESO 2016
Jury Meeting
Residency@CERN 2015 Ars Electronica Center
Jury Meeting 22. – 23.02.2016
Ars Electronica Center Gerfried Stocker (AT), Horst Hörtner (AT),
13. – 14.07.2015 Martin Honzik (AT), Slobodan Coba
Gerfried Stocker (AT), Horst Jovanovic (SB), Richard Kitta (UK), Fernando
Hörtner (AT), Monica Bello (ES), Comerón (ES), Robert Devčić (UK), Jurij
Mike Stubbs (UK), Michael Krpan (SI), Lucía García Rodríguez (ES),
Doser (AT/CH) Lynn Scarff (IE), Fermin Serrano Sanz (ES)

Residency@ESO 2015
Jury Meeting
Ars Electronica Center Residencies
23. – 25.02.2015
Gerfried Stocker (AT), Horst Residency@CERN
Hörtner (AT), Slobodan Coba 08.10. – 14.12.2015
Jovanovic (SB), Richard Kitta (UK), Semiconductor (UK)
Fernando Comeron (ES),
Robert Devčić (UK), Jurij residency@Ars Electronica Futurelab, Linz,
Krpan (SI), Lucía García ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk; ESOC, Darmstadt
Rodríguez (ES), Diane 17. – 21.10.2016, 27.02. – 17.03.2017,
Mc’Sweeney (IR), Fermin 28.04. – 20.05.2017, 11. – 24.06.2017
Serrano Sanz (ES), José Carlos Aoife Van Linde Tol (IE)
Arnal (ES)
residency@Ars Electronica Futurelab, Linz,
Residency@ESA 2016 ESO, Chile
Jury Meeting 13. – 25.05.2015, 27.7. – 15.09.2015
Ars Electronica Center María Ignacia Edwards (CL)
08. – 09.07.2016
Gerfried Stocker (AT), Horst residency@Ars Electronica Futurelab, Linz,
Hörtner (AT), Claudia Mignone (IT), ESO, Chile
Karen O’Flaherty (IE), Dobrivoje 24.05. – 18.06.2016, 15.08. – 15.09.2016
Lale Eric (SB), Richard Kitta (UK), Quadrature (DE)
Karin Ohlenschläger (ES),
Jurij Krpan (SI) residency@Ars Electronica Futurelab, Linz,
Fraunhofer MEVIS, Bremen
20. – 31.03.2017, 15.05. – 26.06.2017
Yen Tzu Chang (TW)

119
Elements of Art and Science
Exhibition
03.09.2015 – 30.08.2016

The exhibition Elements of Art and Science at


Ars Electronica Center was a presentation of
outstanding works whose origins straddle the
worlds of art and science.

Silk Leaf, Julian Melchiorri

The Elements of Art and Science exhibition included several outstanding works
that demonstrate the varied approaches and methods artists use when dealing
with scientific subjects. Establishing interconnections among diverse fields of
knowledge provides access to alternative perspectives and can foster the
emergence of ideas for new developments.

120
Akira Wakita (JP)
Furnished Fluids
Furnished Fluid is a visualization that utilizes
the air flow that we are practically unaware of
in our daily lives. This installation, which
integrates design miniatures and real-time
images, enables us to use the power of
science to make visible the appealing and
valuable aspects of 20th century industrial
design. W. W. Stool (1990) by Philippe Starck,
Hill House 1 (1902) by Charles Rennie
Mackintosh, and the Big Easy (1991) by

AEC, Martin Hieslmair


Ron Arad were selected in tribute to these
great designers.

Akira Wakita (JP) conducted studies regarding the theme of physicality, focusing on real time images
produced by physical simulation on the one hand and materials that can control colors and shapes on
the other hand. In recent years, he developed original software based on fluid-dynamic and
thermodynamic models, striving for visualization across science and art. akirawakita.com

Kepler’s Dream
Ann-Katrin Krenz (DE), Michael Burk (DE)

Kepler’s Dream is an esthetical investigation,


exploring obsolete projection technologies in
combination with computationally created
content that is given a physical shape through
3D printing.

Michael Burk (DE) / Ann-Katrin Krenz (DE) are an


interaction designer and a media artist based in Berlin.
Focusing on the design of spatial media environments
and physical interfaces, they pursue the creation of
enriching experiences that enable a meaningful
relation with the user or spectator. Ranging from
critical design that provokes thought, to immersive
interactive environments that blend boundaries of
the virtual and the physical.
AEC, Tom Mesic

michael-burk.de; wp10612599.server-he.de/anni

121
Ursula Damm (DE)
The Outline of Paradise
What would our cities look like if
advertising messages were the techno
esthetic of conventional advertising?
The Outline of Paradise explores the
promises and capabilities of
technoscience and develops videos
and installations out of these narratives.
It sets the technology towards a natural,
sensual esthetic, which would be
natural and sustainable.

Ursula Damm (DE) became known for her installations dealing with geometry and its social impact on public
space. Since 1995 these installations became interactive, dealing with architectural aspects on the basis
of tracking technology. Aside she developed numerous installations on the relationship between nature,
science, and civilization. Ursula Damm’s works are shown worldwide in exhibitions and festivals.
Since 2008 she holds the chair of Media Environments at Bauhaus University Weimar. ursuladamm.de

Dana Zelig (IL)


Traces
Traces explores the concept of programming
everyday materials, a form of “physical
programming” where objects are “made to
act” on some form following specific
instructions. To explore this idea, Dana Zelig
developed 12 processed-folding objects series,
designed with the Processing programming
language and various physical techniques.
AEC, Tom Mesic

Dana Zelig (IL) is a designer and lives in Tel Aviv. She has a degree in Visual Communication from
Shenkar College for Engineering, Design and Art, and a Master in Industrial Design from Bezalel Academy
of Arts and Design in Jerusalem. danazelig.com

122
Yasuaki Kakehi (JP)
Transmart Miniascape
Transmart miniascape is an art
installation for displaying volumetric
images that blends in with ambient

AEC, Florian Voggeneder


surroundings.

Yasuaki Kakehi (JP) is a media artist and a researcher. He has worked at Keio University and was a
visiting scholar at MIT Media Lab. In intersections of art, design, and engineering, he has explored possibilities
of technology and expressions beyond integrations of the physical and digital resources. He has also
exhibited artworks as a team named plaplax. xlab.sfc.keio.ac.jp

James Bridle (UK)


Watching the Watchers
Watching the Watchers is a series of
drone images from Google Maps and
other publicly accessible sources
of satellite images. These aerial
photographs show military bases in
the US, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and other
places from which the military operates
drones.

James Bridle (UK) is an artist and writer based in Athens. His artworks have been commissioned by galleries and
institutions and exhibited worldwide and on the internet. His writing on literature, culture, and networks has
appeared in magazines and newspapers including Wired, Domus, Cabinet, Atlantic, New Statesman, Guardian,
Observer and many others, in print and online. He lectures regularly at conferences, universities, and other
events. booktwo.org

123
Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman, Joe Gerhardt/UK)
A particular kind of conversation
In their art works the artist duo
Semiconductor explores the fundamental
material nature of our world and how we
experience it through the lens of science
and technology, investigating how devices
mediate our experiences of nature and
position man as an observer of the physical
world. They combine methods of filming,
animation, sound and dialogue; re-working
and combining actual elements of the
scientific language of particle physics
(verbal, visual, aural, technological…) into
new forms.

Semiconductor is UK artist duo Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. In their art works they explore the material
nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of science and technology, questioning how
they mediate our experiences. They have exhibited and screened their works worldwide.

Cédric Brandilly (FR)


Architectural SonarWorks
The aim of Architectural SonarWorks is to
create a musical / audio language based
upon cartographic statements and
architectural characteristics which belong
to a definite space. It also consists in
imagining architecture as a partition. Each
architectural element, each building has
characteristics that can be turned into
sounds. The determination of a musical
language from a linear—from point A to
point B—is made possible. For this project
the artist does not capture urban sounds to
broadcast them at a later date, but instead
writes real musical scores using map data.

Cédric Brandilly (FR) is a visual artist and performer. Having studied fine arts and architecture, he continued his
education in the academic section of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid. New
technologies and the binomial Art and Science are currently right at the heart of his research and his work.
cedricbrandilly.com

124
Golan Levin (US), Kyle McDonald (US),
Chris Sugrue (US)
Augmented Hand Series

The Augmented Hand Series is a real-time


interactive software system that presents
playful, dreamlike, and uncanny
transformations of its visitors’ hands.
Conceived as a tool for muddling
embodied cognition, the installation
consists of a box into which a visitor inserts
their hand, and a display that shows their

AEC, Martin Hieslmair


“reimagined” hand, altered by various
dynamic and structural transformations.

Golan Levin (US) explores the intersection of abstract communication and interactivity. He is Associate
Professor of Electronic Art at Carnegie Mellon University. Kyle McDonald (US) works with sounds and codes,
exploring translation, contextualization, and similarity. Kyle is a member of FAT Lab, community manager for
openFrameworks and an adjunct professor at the NYU ITP. Chris Sugrue (US) is an artist and engineer who
develops interactive installations, audio-visual performances, and experimental interfaces. She teaches new
media arts at The Parsons School of Design in Paris.

María Ignacia Edwards (CL)


Encounters
The artist works with equilibrium, lightness,
and weightlessness of objects that she brings
into balance by deploying their own weight or
counterweights. Though, at first glance, her
works are perceived as purely esthetic, artistic
objects, it soon dawns on those who behold
them that these constructions are the result of
elaborate mathematical and physical
calculations. Based on her experience at the
ESO observatories La Silla and ALMA, María
created a Mobile Instrument that is able to
AEC, Tom Mesic

capture the movement of pieces located at


distant places by a mechanism, as a reference
to time and the motion of the universe.

María Edwards (CL). After receiving her BA in Arts from Finis Terrae University in Santiago und her Diploma in
Cinema, Art Direction and Photography from the University of Chile, she lived and worked in New York City,
exhibiting her artworks internationally. Recipient of the Art for Science prize, awarded by the National
Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT) in Santiago, Chile.

125
Nick Ervinck (BE)
VIUNAP
VIUNAP is a 3D print of one absurd building initially presented as a 2D wall print.
The artist used traditional cottages, which he turned into absurd buildings. The
cottages became figures with connotations to crabs and other sea animals that
walk along the beach, resembling the impossible structures in the engravings of
the mathematician Escher (1898 –1972).
Photo: Peter Verplancke

Nick Ervinck (BE) explores the boundaries between various media. Studio Nick Ervinck applies
tools and techniques from new media, in order to explore the aesthetic potential of sculpture,
3D prints installation, architecture and design. His work oscillates between the static and the
dynamic, prospecting new virtual or utopian territories. He creates huge installations, sculptures,
prints, work drawings, and animated films. nickervinck.com

126
Nick Ervinck (BE)
Selected Works

AYAMONSK is derived from vegetable


structures and coated with a glossy varnish
which in turn refers to the virtual genesis of
this form.
Photo: Luc Dewaele

ELBETAAD is a 3D print inspired by the


voluptuousness of the so-called “Rubens
woman.” It brings into question the “skin”
of the sculpture.
Photo: Peter Verplancke

NIKEYSWODA / GARFINOSWODA seem made


out of two components but are printed as one
entity. The blue smooth form almost embraces
the yellow explosive structure.
Photo: Peter Verplancke

For AGRIEBORZ, Nick Ervinck used imagery of


human organs that he found in medical
manuals as construction materials to create an
organic form. Though imaginary, it seems to
retain some familiarity due to its visual
connection to human organs, muscles, and
nerves. BORTOBY is clearly animal-like, but is
Photo: Luc Dewaele impossible to define well. One can see a
lion-like body, crab-like legs and devils, but
also a transformer robot or a monstrous
creature.
Photo: Luc Dewaele

127
Christa Sommerer (AT) and
Laurent Mignonneau (AT/FR)
Portrait on the Fly
Portrait on the Fly consists of a series of
interactive portraits and plotter drawings,
inspired by Guiseppe Arcimboldo’s
fantastic composite heads from the
mid-15th century. For the series Portrait on
the Fly Sommerer and Mignonneau
modeled virtual insects that can align
themselves so as to compose human
portraits in real time.

Laurent Mignonneau (AT/FR) and Christa Sommerer (AT) are internationally renowned media artists,
researchers and pioneers in the field of interactive art. For 25 years now they have been exhibiting their
works worldwide, and they have won numerous awards such as the 2012 Wu Guanzhong Art and Science
Innovation Prize of the Ministry of Culture of the PRC and the Golden Nica of the 1994 Prix Ars Electronica.
They are heads of the Interface Cultures Department at the University of Art and Design Linz, and
guest professors at Aalborg University in Denmark and the Université Paris 8.

Jonathan Keep (SA/UK)


Seed Bed/Three Vases
3D printed ceramics

The Seed Bed relates to the fundamental


concept of evolutionary morphologies but
also creative growth. Generated in
computer code my working method lends
itself to altering the code to make related
and evolving shapes. Being able to 3D print
these unique and individual forms directly
from the computer in clay represents the
strength of this technology and fulfills my
desire to explore the possibilities of
ceramic form. For me art and science are
inexplicitly linked.

Jonathan Keep (SA/UK) was born and grew up in South Africa, obtaining a BA (Hons) Fine Art degree from
the University of Natal in 1979. In 1986 he moved to England and settled in Suffolk where he has a studio in
Knodishall. In 2002 he received a MA from the Royal College of Art. He has exhibited and undertaken a
number of artist residencies in the UK and abroad. keep-art.co.uk

128
Julian Melchiorri (IT/UK)
Silk Leaf
Inspired by natural mechanisms and physical
phenomena, Julian Melchiorri conducted
laboratory experiments in order to explore the
potential for making materials that
photosynthesize, and their possible
applications. Silk Leaf is the first result of this
research. It is a modular device that
photosynthesizes, made of a biological
material mostly composed of silk protein and
chloroplasts.

Julian Melchiorri (IT/UK), a designer engineer and innovator, is internationally known for his visionary projects
Silk Leaf & Exhale, where he proposes radical environmental solutions for the urban and industrial environment
using novel photosynthetic devices he invented through intense laboratory experimentation. His works, located
between art and science, explore new scenarios and experiences. julianmelchiorri.com

Brian Harms (US)


Suspended Depositions

Suspended Depositions is a novel rapid


prototyping approach that aims to blur
the line between processes of design
and fabrication. The project explores
the concept of programming everyday
materials, a form of “physical
programming,” where objects are
“made to act” on some form following
specific instructions.

Brian Harms (US) is a Senior Research Engineer within the Think Tank Team at Samsung Research America,
Silicon Valley. His work involves designing and developing digital tools and physical prototypes that help aid
and inform creative design processes and fabrication methods. He has previously worked at such firms as
IwamotoScott, Future Cities Lab, Griffin Enright Architects, and has consulted for Stephen Phillips Architects
(SPARCHS), Doug Jackson Design Office, and Testa/Weiser. nstrmnt.com

129
IAAC-Institute for Advanced
Architecture of Catalonia (ES)
Minibuilders
The construction industry is wasteful and
inefficient, slow to adopt technologies that are
already well established in other fields, such as
robotics. Minibuilders is scalable, it supplants
one large robot for a number of smaller agile
robots, that work together effectively towards
a single outcome.

IAAC – The Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia is an international center for
Education, Fabrication and Research dedicated to the development of architecture capable of
meeting the worldwide challenges in constructing 21st century habitability. With Minibuilders
they tried to propose new ways and possibilities for the construction industry to work more
efficiently and to produce as little waste as possible. robots.iaac.net

James Medcraft

Universal Everything (UK)


Presence
Presence turns the screen into a stage, the body into an abstracted sculpture.
Experimenting with various materials and forms, the life-sized moving sculptures
cycle through a randomized collection of “costumes” that range from colorful light
trails to crystalline formations, with only the movement revealing the human
presence within.

130
Universal Everything (UK)
Supreme Believers
A lone figure struggles to make his way
across a sparse, grassy landscape,
seemingly battling the elements as they
beat him back. His body starts to
decompose, surrendering to the
invisible physical forces, and he
disappears into a cascade of particles.

Universal Everything (UK)


Voxel Posse
Utilizing the powers of 3D printing
and anthropomorphism, Universal
Everything creates a fleet of
miniature vector robots. Looking like
crystalline rocks that sprouted legs,
these creatures are yet another
exploration into harnessing the
most basic elements of the human
form to infuse inanimate objects
with the essence of life.

Universal Everything (UK) is a digital art practice and design studio based in Sheffield. The studio was
founded in 2004 by Matt Pyke, who is the creative director. He studied botanical and technical illustration
then graphic design before spending eight years at the Designers Republic (1996–2004). Universal Everything
have worked with several well known brands and corporations including Chanel, AOL, Intel, Nike Inc.,
Hyundai, and Deutsche Bank. universaleverything.com

131
formquadrat (AT), Meinhard Schwaiger
(IAT21 GmbH/AT)
D-Dalus:
A New Way of Traveling

The D-Dalus is the “enfant terrible”


of the aircraft industry with outstanding
and surprising new flight features. The
D-Dalus can do more than just fly …
it can also start and land vertically,
float, and turn on its axis. When the
engines are switched off for a fraction
formquadrat

of a second, the D-Dalus can even


suction itself onto the landing surface,
thus enabling it to land on ships
or other planes.

Meinhard Schweiger (AT) is an inventor. He studied mechanical engineering and has been working in R&D and
technical management since 1982. He is the founder / co-founder and CEO of three companies. His many awards
include the Gold Solvin Innovation Award in 2007; the 2011 Green Dot Awards; nominations for the State Award
Consulting in 2009 and 2013; the Upper Austrian Innovation Award and the Austrian Patent Office Inventum
Award in 2012; and the Linzer Company of the Year Award in 2013.

Zeiss (DE)
Zeiss VR One

The Zeiss VR One is an innovative device that


allows us to take our novel steps in the world
of virtual reality. The VR One is the first and
only VR headset that is made with a
leading-edge optical design and Zeiss
precision optics. With the VR ONE, the
smartphone you carry in your pocket can take
you to worlds of virtual and augmented reality.
Compatible with many smartphones and
hundreds of apps made for mobile VR devices,
you can simply download and launch the app,
lock your smartphone in the VR One precision
tray, and slide it in the VR One. Experience VR
games, videos, and amazing experiences that
were never before possible.
Text and photos: zeissvrone.tumblr.com, vrone.us

132
exonemo (JP)
Body Paint
This work uses body painting to
examine our physical definitions, our
physicality, in a world of networked
information devices. Each work in this
portrait series features a person,
nude, shaved, and painted entirely in
a single shade of color, displayed on
an LCD that has been entirely painted
in the same color except for the
human subject on the screen. The
boundaries between background and
foreground are erased—a human
body and an electronic display body
are both covered in the same color
paint—and the works evoke the
AEC, Martin Hieslmair

themes of ambiguity and confusion,


and whether the individual depicted
is a human being or a picture of a
human being.

exonemo (JP) is an artist duo, formed in 1996 by Yae Akaiwa and Kensuke Sembo. Their experimental projects
are typically humorous and innovative explorations of the paradoxes of digital and analog computer networked
and actual environments in our lives. Their The Road Movie won the Golden Nica for Net Vision category at
Prix Ars Electronica 2006. They have been organizing the IDPW gatherings and Internet Yami-Ichi since 2012.
exonemo.com

133
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna / Institute of Art and Architecture (AT)
Vienna 3000
Dissatisfied with the reality of architecture as well as urban planning, the
Architectural Design Studio at the Institute of Art and Architecture (Academy of
Fine Arts Vienna/AT) was driven by the ambition to explore the radical uncertainty
of the far future. Students were invited to develop individual trajectories into the
unknown and encouraged to develop design projects that embody the potential to
question our beliefs and standards of today. Funded entirely by the City of Vienna,
the studio places great emphasis on planning scenarios for the Austrian capital.

Cenk Güzelis
Queer City
What if our body would not have to limit itself
to a specific time and space? Liberating the
body: dissolving boundaries and limits,
departure from horizontal linearity. What are
the consequences for the urban fabric? What
does the condition of “in space” mean?
A vertical movement is introduced to the idea
of space and city, placing emphasis on the
space inbetween, the space where people
meet and interact. Dynamics of a future urban
reality between order and disorder. Frozen for
display.

134
Anna Krumpholz
A Land of Honey
The citizens of Vienna—naked and without
possessions—live in honey shelters. The
whole city fabric consists of a semi-
organic thread structure that produces
and evaporates honey plasma. The
plasma exists in gaseous and gel form
and accumulates softly on the body,
responding to individual sleeping patterns.
Thus, Vienna is a city of constantly
changing shape, always growing and
shrinking.

Clemens Aniser & Wolfgang Novotny


Urban Stimulus
Urban Stimulus is the description of an
artificial paradise driven by the stimulation of
senses and sensations, envisioning an urban
future based on perception. Urban Stimulus
is recording and storing sensorial data,
distributing information like radiant visuals and
vibrating sounds; vaporing essences of
aromatic memories via haze and mist;
achieving tactile diversity through its ever
changing surface and skin, shifting from oily
to rough, hairy to hard, constantly blurring
the borders between object and subject until
they merge and create a complex unity.

135
Helvijs Savickis
Time Capsule
a nuclear waste information center

In the year 3000 the safe storage of


nuclear waste will remain a challenge even
if the use of nuclear energy has stopped.
To highlight the danger of buried nuclear
waste around the world a nuclear waste
information center is built in Vienna—seat
of the IAEA, International Atomic Energy
Agency. An impressive underground space
functions as a time capsule whilst also
open to the public—safeguarding the
continuity of knowledge about a major
threat to humanity.

Matea Ban
Welfare State 3000
Welfare State 3000 displays a social housing unit
for hybrids between animals and humans. It is
built at a time when men and animals are all the
same and DNA engineering has sufficient power to
modify the human genome. People acquire major
animal attributes like flying or a much-prolonged
life span and require appropriate accommodation.
Five cross-species live in a hybrid habitat, the
so-called “unity of architecture and landscape.”
Hybrids between ladybirds, elephants, anacondas,
crocodiles, seagulls, and humans reside in this
housing estate.

136
Michael Glechner
Enlightened Being
Vienna as an energetic dynamic reality

Due to evolution human beings have


developed abilities to handle energy more
directly. They can survive on absorbing energy
that light and atmospheric vibrations emit. The
properties of the city have changed according-
ly. Light has become the major driver of a
constantly changing urban planning process.
Consequently, architecture is adaptive too.
Matter and energy cannot be seen as separate
anymore. Like nature, architecture depends on
light conditions. Where there is light, there is
life and the potential for urban development.

Sasha Konovalov
Memento
The Memento project is dedicated to help find
digital versions of reality that existed at some
time in the past. These prior versions are
called Mementos, and can be found in spatial
archives or in systems that support versioning.
Memento is a digital archaeology project that
reconstructs virtual artifacts from the present
time—in this case glitches from google
earth—mistakenly understood as the past
reality by the future inhabitants of our planet.

Marlene Lübke-Ahrens
Movements
In the far future any need for action has
disappeared. Movement is pure leisure.
Without the need for transportation
infrastructure, the planning of the city is driven
by notions of pleasure and experience. The
bicycle has a renaissance as the ideal object
for a pleasure ride and to retain the wellbeing
of an otherwise passive society.

137
The Alchemists of Art and Science
Exhibition
08.09.2016 – 30.08.2017

The exhibition The Alchemists of Art and Science at the


Ars Electroncia Center Linz presented both exciting,
innovative projects at the intersection of art and science
as well as the results of the various residencies within the
European Digital Art and Science Network.

Ghost Cell, Antoine Delacharlery

Ars Electronica 2016 took “RADICAL ATOMS and the alchemists of our time” as its
festival theme, a leitmotiv coined by Hiroshi Ishii that shifts attention to the human
beings behind these works and developments. An extensive exhibition spotlighted
positions and approaches from both directions—science and art—in which
concepts such as art-thinking and creative prototyping and the idea of artistic
work as catalyst play major roles. “Artists’ Laboratories” focus on the workplaces
of artists and interdisciplinary teams, and thus shed light on the extraordinary
ecosystem of art and science collaboration. These exhibits featured jointly
produced works that offer deep insights into the concepts and practices of art and
science collaborations. The exhibition also featured projects that were the outcome
of artist-in-residence programs e.g. by the German artists’ collective Quadrature
who spent time at the European Southern Observatory’s research facilities in Chile
and Germany.

138
NOHlab (TR)
Prima Materia
a stereoscopic audiovisual journey

Alchemical authors have compared the prima


materia to everything: To male and female, to
the hermaphroditic monster, to heaven and
earth, to body and spirit, chaos, microcosm,
and the confused mass. It contains in itself all
colors and potentially all metals. There is
nothing more wonderful in the world, for it

AEC, Robert Bauernhansl


begets itself, conceives itself, and gives birth
to itself. The stereoscopic piece by the
Istanbul-based multidisciplinary Studio
NOHlab will take the audience on an
audiovisual journey.
Art Direction and Visuals by NOHlab
Sound Design By Giray Gürkal

NOHlab (TR) is a studio founded and directed by two experienced creative partners: Deniz Kader & Candaş
Şişman. The studio was established at the end of 2011 as a result of highly successful collaboration between
these two motion and visual artists in the past. Both follow a unique and distinctive art and concept direction in
their projects, focused in the areas of art direction, motion design, projection mapping, audiovisual performance,
and new media for art and culture and the advertising industry. www.nohlab.com

Jussi Ängeslevä (FI)


Beyond Prototyping

Beyond Prototyping is a research project


looking at the dynamics between the designer,
manufacturing process, and the consumer in
creating everyday products in the age of
digital fabrication. The “meaning” of an artifact
transcends its physical utility and technical
characteristics and is increasingly a personal
narrative. The three case studies, Ciphering,
Locatable, and Highlight, illustrate different
Michael Burk

strategies of how the experts and the target


audience can together create meaningful,
unique artifacts, based on an algorithmic
design idea and through an online platform for
intuitive interaction. The designs play with a Jussi Ängeslevä; Iohanna Nicenboim; Michael Burk;
distinct functional definition of a product and Universität der Künste Berlin; Technische Universität
Berlin; Einstein Stiftung Berlin; Bartmann Berlin;
distinct esthetics, which are expressed
Recoltoir; Masonyte; pb.io; Hybrid Plattform
through the end user’s encoded input of
meaning, resulting in well-designed and robust
but individual products that go beyond
prototype status.

Jussi Ängeslevä (FI) teaches at the University of the Arts Berlin and the Royal College of Arts alongside leading
the creative efforts at ART+COM Studios as a Vice Creative Director. Throughout his career his focus has always
been intentionally in between fields: combining understanding of visual, physical, and interaction design with
algorithmic, electronic, and mechatronic knowledge to create innovative and elegant experiences.
www.angesleva.iki.fi

139
Sarah Petkus (US)
NoodleFeet
NoodleFeet is the functioning robotic
manifestation of an illustrated character who is
built from light metals, 3D printed parts, and
found objects. Noodle has been developed with
mechanical and electronic systems which allow
him to exhibit behaviors when stimulated by
objects in his environment. His purpose is to exist
freely in the world while reacting to situational
encounters using self-defining methods of
personal expression. Where most technology has
a practical or utilitarian application meant to
enhance our lives, Noodle is a unique entity who
functions without regard to a human’s perception
of his purpose or usefulness. My goal is that this
may provoke consideration about the motivation
behind humanity’s current innovations. I hope that Sarah Petkus (US) is a kinetic artist and roboticist
those who interact with Noodle witness a from Las Vegas, whose area of focus is in
developing mechanical and electronic systems as
meaningful sense of self from him that will
characters, capable of reacting to environmental
encourage reflection in regard to the value of their stimulation with unique, self-defining behavioral
own relation to the technology common in quirks. zoness.com
everyday life.

Aoife van Linden Tol (IE/UK)


Second Story
London based artist Aoife Van Linden Tol
invited the residents of Linz to submit material
for the second incarnation of her project
Second Story which took place at the Ars
Electronica Festival. The project explores the
influence of words and images to create an
explosive force within each individual as well
as the emotional responses created when
presented with literal physical explosions. The
universal nature of both these phenomena
inspired Aoife to create a project that allows
many people to continue their own dialogue
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

with explosive forces. Her aim was to uncover


some of the collective and individual emotions
of those living in Linz. On the Saturday of the
Festival visitors were able to observe the artist
while she processed the submitted material
(photos, books, etc.) with different forms of
explosions. The final outcome was later
exhibited at the Ars Electronica Center.

Aoife van Linden Tol (IE/UK) graduated from Central St Martins College of Art and Design in 2002 with a BA
Hons in Art & Design. She has exhibited internationally including at the ICA, London, the San Francisco MOMA,
US, and the NGBK Berlin. Aoife has recently worked with Imperial College, researching light spectra for a series in
neon and was invited by Disney to design a limited edition model Star Wars BB-8 robot, which was auctioned by
Force for Change charity, benefiting Great Ormond St Hospital.

140
Helene Steiner (AT/UK)
Project Florence
Nature has many languages. Project Florence takes advantage of the sensibility of
plants to different light frequencies and uses it to trigger electrical responses by a
plant and compares the similarities between plant signals and natural language
processes. It approaches plants as reactive living matter which generates new
perceptions towards how we interface with our natural environment. This creates a
rudimentary conversation with our natural environment. In this system, the user
first attempts to communicate with or influence the plant through modulated
natural language. Their inputs are analyzed for sentiment and semantic content.
The resulting signals are used to modulate a light source that projects onto the
plant. During this, the chemical and electrical signals are measured. The resulting
responses from the plant are transformations of the input, driven by linguistic trees
as well as lexical paraphrases. Project Florence can be a mediator between the
natural environment and our technological world.

Project Florence is the creation of Helene Steiner, Artist in Residence, Microsoft Research.
Microsoft Research; Helene Steiner, Paul Johns, Asta Roseway, Chris Quirk, Sidhant Gupta,
Jonathan Lester.

Helene Steiner (UK) is a designer and researcher with a focus on new interactions in and
with our (natural) environment. Her research follows an biological approach and looks at
opportunities to not only bridge the physical and digital world but also the natural and artificial.
Her background is in Product Design with a MDes from the Bauhaus University in Weimar.
Currently she is a PostDoc Researcher in Human Experience Design at Microsoft Research
Cambridge, UK. http://www.helenesteiner.com
Microsoft Research‘s studio99 aims to introduce artistic perspectives, processes, and values
in the work of our organization. studio99 seeks to build collaborations between researchers/
engineers and artists/designers to create beautiful and innovative experiences that inspire new
ways of thinking about existing and future scientific challenges.

141
AEC, Robert Bauernhansl

Afroditi Psarra (GR), Cécile Lapoire (FR)


Cosmic Bitcasting
A wearable cosmic ray detector
In our era of continuous technological and scientific discoveries, where space
probes are scouting the galaxy for Earth-like planets and huge particle accelerators
are trying to reproduce the birth of our universe, the data that we collect from
looking at a macro scale—observing the cosmos, or at a micro scale—observing
subatomic particles, are essential for humankind to grasp the invisible world that
surrounds and rules our everyday existence. Cosmic Bitcasting emerges from the
idea of connecting the human body with the universe by creating a wearable
interface that can provide sensory feedback on the invisible cosmic radiation that
passes through us. The project proposes the creation of an open-source, wearable
detector that can detect secondary muons generated by cosmic rays hitting the
Earth’s atmosphere, by triggering a series of embedded actuators (light and
vibration) as they pass through the human body.
www.zaragoza.es/ciudad/etopia
Cosmic Bitcasting was developed during a one-month residency at the Etopia—Center for Art
and Technology in Zaragoza, in the context of the residency Reverberadas program, part of the
European Art and Science Network, curated by Fermín Serrano.

142
Afroditi Psarra (GR), Dafni Papadopoulou (GR)
The Culture Series
The Culture series is an e-textiles project
inspired by the Space Operas of British science
fiction writer Iain M. Banks and his eclectic
imagery of The Culture—a future civilization of
people whose lives depend on sophisticated
machines in a world where everything is
sentient. The garment can be perceived as a
hybrid organism, responsive to the user’s vital
functions—heartbeat—through subtle
movements on the sleeves that behave as an
augmented animalistic skin that breathes in
and out. Technically, the project aims to
combine electronic handicrafts with
parametric design and digital fabrication on
an ongoing research on wearables. The
garment’s sleeves are designed in Rhino and
Grasshopper and have been laser-cut on
leather and then assembled by hand in
complex structures. The garment’s circuit has
an embedded Arduino microcontroller and
lightweight actuators created using muscle
wire, neoprene, and conductive copper fabric
sewn into the inside of the leather structure, as
well as a 3D-printed earring with an embedded
pulse sensor.
www.wemake.cc

The Culture series was created during a two-week


residency at WeMake—Milan’s Makerspace in February
2015, curated by Zoe Romano.

Afroditi Psarra (GR), is a multidisciplinary artist and researcher working in the field of e-textiles. Her interest
focuses on the creation of handcrafted technological artifacts and the use of the human body as an interface.
She holds a PhD on Cyberpunk, Digital art and Performance, focusing on the merge of science fiction ideas with
digital practices. In 2016 she joined the Center for Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS) at the University
of Washington, Seattle, as assistant professor.
Dafni Papadopoulou (GR), is an architect who has collaborated with different architecture studios in Barcelona
and Athens and has been awarded in various architectural competitions. Her fields of interest are focused on the
interaction between body techniques, space and urban conditions. She has been experimenting on algorithmic
design, interaction technologies, and electronic textiles.
Cécile Lapoire (FR) holds a PhD in experimental particle physics. She took part in the Higgs boson discovery at
CERN in Geneva and spent a significant amount of time underground in the heart of the ATLAS detector. She is
now back on the surface, orienting herself toward the world of textile and design.

143
AEC, Martin Hieslmair
Christoph Wachter (CH), Mathias Jud (CH)
“Can you hear me?“
Edward Snowden’s disclosures shined the spotlight of public attention on Berlin’s
federal government district, revealing it to be the site of extremely intense
surveillance and espionage by numerous intelligence agencies. This is precisely
where the artists wanted to set up a temporary installation on the subject of power
and powerlessness in the Digital Age. On the roofs of the Academy of Arts and the
Swiss Embassy—right between the listening posts in the American and British
Embassies—they set up improvised antennas and installed an independent Wifi
communications network, the range of which included the Reichstag, the Office of
the Federal Chancellor and the Swiss Embassy. Anyone with a Wifi-capable device
could join the network and chat, send text messages and share files. Personnel of
the embassies and German government agencies were cordially invited to join in
too. Plus, anyone who wished could send messages to the intelligence
organizations on precisely those frequencies on which the American NSA and the
British GCHQ were listening in.

Christoph Wachter (CH), Mathias Jud (CH) live and work in Berlin. They have participated in
numerous international art exhibitions and been awarded many international prizes As
open-source projects their works uncover forms of censorship of the Internet, undermine the
concentration of political power and even resolve the dependency on infrastructure. The tools,
provided by the artists, are used by communities in the USA, Europe, Australia, and in countries
like Syria, Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, India, China, and Thailand. Even in North Korea activists
participate. But not everyone is fond of these projects. The People’s Republic of China has
denied Wachter and Jud a visa to enter the country since 2013.

144
NEFFA

Aniela Hoitink / NEFFA (NL)


MycoTEX
The purpose of MycoTEX was to create a textile out of living material and to
develop a real garment out of it. Aniela started by combining mycelia with textiles,
in order to create flexible composite products. But during the research process she
developed a method for retaining flexibility without using traditional textile
materials, but only pure mycelia. Building the textile out of modules provided a
number of relevant benefits. Repair and replacement of the garment are easy and
do not interfere with the look of the fabric. The garment can be built
three-dimensionally and shaped while being made, to suit the wearer’s wishes. Thus
it is possible to adjust its length or to add elements. This allows growth of just the
right amount of material needed, eliminating any potential waste during the
production process. Once the garment is no longer in use it can easily be
composted, making it possible to completely rethink future possibilities for fashion
items.
Project credits: NEFFA; Universiteit Utrecht; Officina Corpuscoli; Mediamatic
This project is presented in the framework of the European Digital Art and Science Network and
co-funded by the Creative Europe program of the European Union.

Aniela Hoitink (NL) launched NEFFA in 2004. Textile innovation, but just that bit different, is what
NEFFA is all about. Through her multi- and interdisciplinary way of working and by altering or
adding properties to textiles, Aniela Hoitink investigates how we can and how we will use textiles
in the future and what the related implications will be. Using technology and microbiology, she is
on a quest to improve / change the properties of traditional textile materials. neffa.nl

145
CIID Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (DK) is an international hub of
creative minds. The integrated structure creates a unique environment that
encompasses world-renowned education, a cutting edge research group, an
award-winning consultancy and a startup incubator. The overarching objective for
CIID is to create impact through the design of innovative products, services, and
environments.

CIID Projects:
AEC, Martin HIeslmair

PELARS
PELARS stands for Practice-based Experiential Learning Analytics Research and
Support. The very title of CIID’s research project is indicative of the fact that not
only the mind comes into play in the learning process; haptic input and sensory
experience also play key roles. Accordingly, a scholarly alliance under the direction
of CIID is performing research on how people learning science, technology, and
mathematics go beyond the purely intellectual and thereby employ not only their
mind but also their hands. How can learning environments be equipped with digital
and electronic technologies so that, when students perform manual work, the data
pertaining to these activities can immediately be gathered and used for analytical
purposes? This is the matter under investigation. In going about answering it, the
project participants are drawing inspiration from, among others, the do-it-yourself
movement, hacker culture, and the electronics hobbyists of our day.
CIID Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (DK) with Universität Bremen (DE), Arduino (SE),
Universitatea Din Craiova (RO), Danmarks Tekniske Universitet (DK), Perch Dynamic Solutions Limit-
ed (IR), National College of Art and Design (IR), Scuola Superiore di Studi Universitari e di Perfezion-
amento Sant‘anna (IT), Malmoe Hoegskola (SE), University College London (UK), European Network
of Living Labs (BE), Fundació Privada Pel Foment de la Societat del Coneixement (ES)

146
Andreas Refsgaard (DK), Line Birgitte Borgersen (DK), Manu Dixit (IN), Riccardo Cereser (IT)
Future Self Mirror
Health and fitness data is being tracked
everywhere these days, but can one really
make sense of this data? Graphs and charts
are often not enough to motivate people. So
how might we visualize the available health
data in a more motivating way? A mirror is the
metaphor for self-reflection and is an everyday
object. We prototyped a mirror that gathers
data from fitness trackers like fitbits,
smartwatches, and smartphones and visualizes
the future health directly on a person’s body
when they look in the mirror. In a way, the
mirror accelerates time so you see your future
self staring back at you. Today’s habits shape
tomorrow’s image. Daily choices of diet,
exercise, stress, smoking and more have a
This project was a part of the Enchanted Objects course visible impact. This mirror augments one’s
taught by David Rose, Adrian Westaway, and Francisco reflection with visual predictions of future
Gomez Paz at the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction
health, made possible by extrapolating the
Design. Moises Bottage helped in managing the space
and materials.
health data from fitness devices and
smartphones.

Andreas Refsgaard (DK) is an interaction designer and a creative coder. andreasrefsgaard.dk


Line Birgitte Borgersen (DK) is an illustrator, a storyteller and an interaction designer. linebirgitte.dk
Manu Dixit (IN) is an interaction designer and a computer science engineer. manudixit.net
Riccardo Cereser (IT) is a digital service designer and social-media marketing expert. www.riccardocereser.com

Sharon Hsienpu Chen, James Zho


Spiritum
No matter how environmentally friendly our
lifestyle is, our very existence—literally every
breath we take—contributes to emitting CO2
into the atmosphere. Spiritum is a concept for
a wearable filter that’s designed to be our
constant companion in everyday life and to
help us reduce our CO2 emissions. It captures
the air we exhale and withdraws the carbon
dioxide from it before it escapes into the
atmosphere. Spiritum exists in a society where
reducing our carbon footprint is a necessity.
AEC, Martin Hieslmair

Carbon conscious individuals can choose to


filter the carbon dioxide from their breath
before releasing it into the air.

147
Window to the World
CIID Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (DK), TME Toyota Motor Europe (EU)
CIID Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design

An automobile’s windshield only had to be transparent and shatterproof heretofore.


But now, “Window to the World” manifests a futuristic vision of mobility in which
the glass front panel separating the passenger compartment from the world
extends an invitation to a new form of interaction between inside and outside. The
pane becomes an interface that moves driving beyond transportation and makes
the car a vehicle for entertainment, play, and information.
Toyota Motor Europe (TME) and CIID collaboratively developed a speculative
concept in which the safety glass becomes a touchscreen, and Augmented Reality
gives the outside world a voice. Window to the World informs passengers about
things worth seeing and knowing about their immediate surroundings, and thus
interrelates those inside with the outside. Plus, you can create drawings on the
glass’ interior surface that then react to the scenery rushing past and thus develop
a life of their own.
Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (CIID), Toyota Motor Europe (TME)

Toyota Motor Europe (TME) is the regional headquarters of Toyota in Europe. TME oversees the
wholesale sales and marketing of Toyota and Lexus vehicles, parts and accessories, and Toyota’s
European manufacturing and engineering operations.

148
Eric Dyer (US)
Implant

Implant is an imaginary medical device that fits into a blood vessel, neuron, etc. It is
super-enlarged, making the viewer feel microscopic. With a genetic retinal disease
in his family’s DNA, Dyer has closely followed developments in gene therapy,
including the insertion of healthy genes into the body using viruses. With Implant
he plays with the paradoxical threat and promise of bleeding-edge, anatomically
invasive and potentially rampant medical practices. Viewers explore the cylindrical
spinning sculpture with hand-held strobe lights, discovering thousands of colorful,
fluffy, and sinister nanobots performing unknown tasks and a spiral of
organic-synthetic gears inside the tube.
Imaging Research Center, University of Maryland Baltimore Campus, US
Creative Capital

Eric Dyer (US) is an artist, experimental filmmaker, and educator. His work has been exhibited
worldwide at events and venues such as the Smithsonian National Gallery of Art, Ars Electronica,
London International Animation Festival, and the Cairo and Venice biennales. He has been
honored as a Fulbright Fellow, Sundance New Frontier Artist, Creative Capital Artist, and
Guggenheim Fellow. Dyer’s work explores a variety of cyclic ideas and themes through
zoetrope-like sculptures. He teaches animation at UMBC, Baltimore. www.ericdyer.com

149
Antoine Delacharlery (FR)
Ghost Cell
Scientific and dreamlike documentary at once, Ghost Cell is a stereoscopic plunge into the guts
of an organic Paris seen as a cell through a virtual microscope.
Screenwriter, editor: Antoine Delacharlery; Executive producer, Line producer: Nicolas Schmerkin,
Autour de Minuit Productions; Production manager: Émilie Schmerkin
Crew: Animation: Antoine Delacharlery, Bastien Dubois, Mathieu Bernadat, Jean Delaunay;
Editing: Antoine Delacharlery; Music Composer: Bastien Prevosto

Antoine Delacharlery (FR) studied 3D animation and then turned to the field of animated short filmmaking and
digital arts, all the while putting a great deal of manual work into his many projects. Exhibiting consummate
versatility, he’s equally adept at exploring many different techniques: 3D, camera work, graphic experimentation
and bricolage. His work thus seeks to weave interconnections among the real, the dreamlike, and the organic.
www.antoinedelach.com

Paolo Cirio (IT)


Obscurity
This artwork is composed of over fifteen
million mugshots of people arrested in the US.
It obscured the criminal records of mugshot
websites by cloning them. The mugshots have
been blurred to make the faces unrecog-
nizable while their names have been shuffled
by an algorithm that samples data based on
common age, race, location, and charges, all
AEC, Martin Hieslmair

of which are kept accurate in order to provide


social context on the actual arrests. A
participatory feature lets people judge the
arrested individual by deciding to keep or
remove their data from the mugshot websites.
Obscurity explores the emotional under-
pinning of unflattering personal information
Paolo Cirio (IT) works with information systems that exposed on the Internet. Beyond the use of
impact the dynamics of social systems. Cirio’s criminal records for the social experiment and
artworks investigate privacy, copyright, and finance.
the performative hack, the project promotes a
He shows his works through prints, installations,
videos, online performances, and interventions in
legal Right to Remove personal information
public spaces. Cirio has presented in international from search engines in US. The Obscurity
museums and his works have been covered by artwork deployed strategies that are oriented
hundreds of media outlets worldwide. on problem-solving as a form of Internet social
art practice.

150
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Ralf Baecker (DE)


Interface I
Interface I investigates the boundary between two interacting systems rendered
into the physical. One system is a compound of motors, twine and elastic bands
arranged horizontally. Each motor is connected to its opposing motor in the facing
system by a string, and to its neighbors by an elastic thread. In order to excite the
system’s behavior, each motor is fed with random impulses from a Geiger-Müller
tube. The mesh couples each element to its surrounding elements in order to
achieve a local emergent behavior. Interface I reproduces space and time in
constantly shifting configurations.
Produced by NOME Gallery Berlin 2016. Production assistant: Antje Weller
Research and experiments essential to the realization of Interface I were carried out as part
of Ralf Baecker’s research project, Time of Non-Reality, at the Graduate School, University
of the Arts, Berlin.

Ralf Baecker (DE), works at the intersection of art, technology and science. Through installations
and machines, he explores fundamental mechanisms of action and the effects of new media and
technologies. Ralf Baecker studied computer science and media art at the Academy of Media
Arts Cologne, and has taught at Bauhaus University in Weimar and the University of the Arts in
Bremen. Baecker is currently a fellow at the Graduate School, University of the Arts Berlin.
www.rlfbckr.org

151
Fractal Fantasy

AlteredQualia (SK) + Fractal Fantasy (AT/CA)


Uncanny Valley
Creating convincing synthetic human beings is a notoriously difficult task. The
“uncanny valley” phenomenon is a hypothesis that as you try to increase the
realism of your human-like creations, there is a point behind which improvements
actually become negative, causing a sense of unease or repulsion. Something flips
in the mind of the observer, and the creature starts to be seen as a “human with
which something seems to be wrong” instead of “human-like”, a doll becomes a
corpse. It takes a lot more effort to climb out of the valley, every little detail that
was abstracted away comes back into play. We created the Uncanny Valley project
to explore these concepts. It is an interactive webpage experiment with three
animated virtual human heads reacting to the user’s mouse movements,
accompanied by three songs, featuring light sources synchronized to the music.
The experiment is trying to find out what can be achieved today on the web, with
very limited resources, on a constrained platform.
fractalfantasy.net/uncannyvalley

Uncanny Valley is the result of a collaboration between the computer graphics programmer Al-
teredQualia, and the platform Fractal Fantasy.
Visuals, code and rendering: Branislav Ulicny, AlteredQualia
Fractal Fantasy, Songs by: Sinjin Hawke, Martyn Bootyspoon, Zora Jones

Branislav Ulicny / AlteredQualia (SK) likes to explore possibilities of real-time computer


graphics on the web. Before succumbing to the temptations of dark arts of rendering, he
dabbled in academic research of artificial life, crowd simulations, and bioinformatics. He is an
alumnus of a popular open source project three.js and holds a doctorate in computer science
from EPFL. alteredqualia.com
Fractal Fantasy (AT/CA) has established itself as an observatory for otherworldly textures, both
aural and visual, over the last past years. The brainchild of Sinjin Hawke and Zora Jones found life
as an outlet for audiovisual pieces in 2013 and has since grown to encompass code experiments
and interactive musical works, all the while remaining a fluid and ever-expanding endeavor.
fractalfantasy.net

152
Quadrature (DE)
STONES
Storage Technology for Observed Nearby
Extraterrestrial Shelters

Astronomical research is very much subject to the


human tendency to observe and evaluate any
findings within the context of our own culture. Yet
the truth of scientific results goes far beyond the
duration of our current civilizations. Just the
detection of exoplanets in the habitable zone*
already constitutes a scientific milestone.
Detached from any contemporary interpretation,
the work archives pure knowledge for the coming
millennia. In a notation that requires no previous

AEC, Florian Voggeneder


cultural education but can be deciphered based
on logic and scientific observation, the knowledge
itself is the main message.
* A planet outside our solar system, orbiting its parent
star in a particular area so that water may be present on
its surface in liquid form. This is regarded as a prerequisite
for the emergence of life. So far, 42 such objects have
been identified. (Source: Planetary Habitability
Laboratory, UPR Arecibo.)

Quadrature (DE)
MASSES
Motors and Stones Searching for Equilibrium State

We place two stones on top of a balanced


steel plate. The aim of the machine is to
position the stones so that the system is
perfectly balanced. In an incessant process,
continuous efforts repeatedly briefly avert the
constant threat of divergence, only for it to
appear elsewhere a moment later. Instead of
the desired state of well-adjusted stability, the
work achieves a permanent state of incessant
motion—a fragile but constant situation
between falling and floating. As the precision
of modern research instruments advances, so
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

their vulnerability increases, and with it the


need to compensate for even the smallest
disturbing influences. Supported by a
machinery of sensors and people, the
apparatus performs an endless sequence of
observation and calibration.

The members of the Quadrature artists’ collective, Jan Bernstein, Juliane Götz, and Sebastian Neitsch (all DE),
met at Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design in Halle. After completing their education, the artists
worked individually in, among other cities, Antwerp, Linz, Valencia, Vienna, and Stuttgart. They collaborated for
the first time in 2009, and went on to establish Quadrature, a collective in which each member inputs his/her
own specific skills and focal-point themes. Most of their artistic projects focus on the contradiction between
knowledge and comprehension.

153
Radical Atoms
Exhibition
07.09.2016 – 15.07.2017

The exhibition Radical Atoms centers around the digital world’s


merger with the physical one and is a reference to the visions and
prototypes that have emerged from the MIT Media Lab’s Tangible
Media Group. Developed in cooperation with Professor Hiroshi Ishii,
this exhibition demonstrates how ideas derived from art can lead to
new technological concepts.

Tangible Media Group / MIT Media Lab

Arranged on a thematic and chronological axis, this exhibition took the theories and works of
Hiroshi Ishii, a professor at MIT Media Lab and one of the pioneers in artistically inspired
technological development, as its point of departure. Examples from the early years of the
Tangible Bits Group demonstrated how ideas derived from art led to the development of
trailblazing and fundamentally new technological concepts. First and foremost among them
are musicBottles, a 1999 work by Hiroshi Ishii (US/JP). Supplementing this exhibition were
works by Carlo Ratti (US), Joachim Sauter (DE), and Ars Electronica Futurelab (AT), which were
on display after the festival at Ars Electronica Center.

The Tangible Media Group at MIT Media Lab, led by Professor Hiroshi Ishii, explores the Tangible Bits & Radical
Atoms visions to seamlessly couple the dual world of bits and atoms by giving dynamic physical form to digital
information and computation. Hiroshi Ishii (US/JP) is Jerome B. Wiesner, professor of Media Arts and Sciences,
associate director of MIT Media Laboratory, and director of the Tangible Media Group. Hiroshi’s research focuses
upon the design of seamless interfaces between humans, digital information, and the physical environment.

154
Christophe Guberan and the Self-Assembly Lab
MIT School of Architecture & Planning
Active Wood Products
Traditional wood-bending techniques require
complex steaming equipment, labor-intensive
forming processes, and a high degree of
expertise. In addition, the natural pattern of
wood grain and its physical properties make it
difficult to curve into complex shapes. Novel
printing and composite material technologies
can now overcome previous limitations on
wood forming. Active Wood Products are
produced with a printed wood filament and
carefully designed flat patterns that when
subject to moisture can self-transform into the
final shape of the product. We imagine a
AEC, Florian Voggeneder
variety of products from tableware to jewelry
and even furniture that can be designed and
printed, shipped flat in a moisture pack, and
then self-transform at home.

Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab


LineFORM
LineFORM is a shape-changing interface in the
form of a “line.” Lines have several interesting
characteristics from the perspective of
interaction design: abstractness of data
representation; a variety of inherent
interactions; and constraints as boundaries or
borderlines. Utilizing such aspects of lines
together with the added capability of
transformation, this project investigates the
design space of line-based shape-changing
interfaces through presenting various
applications such as shape-changing cords,
mobiles, body constraints, and data
manipulation.
Research: Ken Nakagaki, Sean Follmer, and Hiroshi Ishii
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Exhibition: Ken Nakagaki, Nikolaos Vlavianos,


and Hiroshi Ishii

155
Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab
Topobo
What is it like to sculpt with motion?
Topobo is a construction toy with a
kinetic memory, able to record and
playback physical motion. Snap
together passive (static) and active
(robotic) pieces into a creation, and
with a press of a button and a flick of
the wrist, you can teach your creation
how to dance or walk. Just as you can
learn how buildings stand by stacking
up blocks, you can discover how

AEC, Florian Voggeneder


animals walk by playing with Topobo.
Research: Hayes Raffle, Amanda Parkes,
Laura Yip and Hiroshi Ishii
Exhibition: Penny Webb and Hiroshi Ishii

Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab


SandScape
SandScape is a tangible interface for
designing and understanding landscapes
through a variety of computational
simulations using sand. Users view these
simulations as they are projected on the
surface of a sand model that represents the
Tangible Media Group, MIT Media Lab

terrain. The users can choose from a


variety of different simulations that
highlight either the height, slope, contours,
shadows, drainage, or another aspect of
the landscape model.
Research: Yao Wang, Assaf Biderman, Ben Piper,
Carlo Ratti, and Hiroshi Ishii
Exhibition: Daniel John Fitzgerald, Luke Vink,
Ken Nakagaki, Nikolaos Vlavianos, and Hiroshi Ishii

156
Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab
musicBottles
musicBottles is an interactive installation for
visitors to interact with sound waves
encapsulated in bottles. The bottles are used
as containers for trapping audio memories;
escaping the bottle and vaporizing into sound
at the opening of a lid. The installation consists
of a set of bottles that encapsulate sounds
from Boston, Cambridge, and the MIT
neighborhood. In 1999, musicBottles was first
introduced as a tangible interface for handling
digital information. The bottles “contained” the
sounds of the violin, the cello, and the piano in
Édouard Lalo’s Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 7.
Opening a bottle by removing its stopper
made the corresponding instrument audible.
In addition to the sounds played, a pattern of
colored light was projected onto the table’s
translucent surface to reflect changes in pitch
and volume. Originally, musicBottles used
custom-designed electromagnetic tags
embedded in the bottle and the stopper, allow-
ing wireless identification of the containers.
The modern version works on the same
principles, except it uses off-the-shelf RFID
tags to identify each bottle and stopper.
Research: Rich Fletcher, Ali Mazalek, Jay Lee, Seungho
Choo, Joanna Berzowska, Craig Wisneski, Charlie Cano,
Andres Hernandez, Colin Bulthaupand,
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Joe Paradiso, and Hiroshi Ishii


Exhibition: Udayan Umapathi, Penny Webb,
Mitchell D Hwang, Patrick Shin, and Hiroshi Ishii

157
AEC, Florian Voggeneder
Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab
inFORM
inFORM is a shape display that gives physical form to digital information. Imagine
being able to reach out and grasp a digital model right in front of you or to handle
physical objects thousands of miles away! Motorized pins act like physical pixels
that extend from a tabletop to form a dynamic, computer-controlled sculpture that
users can view, touch, and deform. Besides rendering information, inFORM can
interact with the world around it by accurately moving and manipulating objects
placed on its surface.
Research: Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Alex Olwal, Philipp Schoessler, Jared Counts,
Ken Nakagaki, David Doan, Basheer Tome, Akimitsu Hogge, and Hiroshi Ishii
Exhibition: Daniel Leithinger, Ken Nakagaki, and Hiroshi Ishii

Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab


PneUI
Energy or substance, air is one the most
abundant resources on earth. In many
mythologies across culture, air brings life to
and animates static substance. PneUI explores
the dynamic interaction between the air and
sheet materials. The digital fabrication
processes enable various shapes to be created
and transformed in a programmable way. With
these tools, new materials are created to
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

design robots that are soft, furniture that is


adaptive, clothing that is intelligent, and art
works that breathe.
Exhibition: Jifei Ou, Nikolaos Vlavianos, and Hiroshi Ishii
Research: Jifei Ou, Felix Heibeck, Lining Yao, Ryuma
Niiyama, Nikolaos Vlavianos, Melina Skouras, and
Hiroshi Ishii

158
Responsive Environments Group –
MIT Media Lab
Rovables
We envision that future wearable
technology will move around the human
body, and will react to its host and the
environment. To proof this concept, we
developed Rovables, miniature robots that
can move freely on unmodified clothing.
The robots are held in place by magnetic
wheels, and can climb vertically. Our
applications include on-body sensing,
modular displays, tactile feedback and
interactive clothing and jewelry.
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Research: Artem Dementyev, Hsin-Liu (Cindy) Kao,


Inrak Choi, Deborah Ajilo, Maggie Xu, Joe Paradiso,
Chris Schmandt, Sean Follmer
Exhibition: Artem Dementyev and Joe Paradiso

Tangible Media Group -MIT Media Lab


bioLogic
bioLogic is growing living actuators and
synthesizing responsive bio-skin in the era
where bio is the new interface. Natto bacteria
are harvested in a bio lab, assembled by a
micron-resolution bio-printing system, and
transformed into responsive fashion, a
“Second Skin.” The synthetic bio-skin reacts to
body heat and sweat, causing flaps around
heat zones to open, enabling sweat to
evaporate and cool down the body through an
organic material flux.
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

Research: Lining Yao, Wen Wang, Guanyun Wang,


Helene Steiner, Chin Yi Cheng, Jifei Ou,
Oksana Anilionyte, and Hiroshi Ishii
Exhibition: Lining Yao, Jifei Ou, Wen Wang, Hiroshi Ishii

159
Carlo Ratti Associati (IT) and OpenDot team
Lift-Bit
Lift-Bit is a modular, digitally reconfigurable
furniture system that allows a sofa to
seamlessly turn into a chair, a chaise longue, a
bed, a complete lounge, and a myriad of other
configurations. The system is composed of a
series of individual, upholstered stools. Each
element is motorized using a linear actuator,
enabling it to be raised or lowered. It can
double (or halve) in height in just a few
seconds. Lift-Bit can be controlled in person,
via a simple gesture (just by hovering your
hand over the seat), or from a distance by a
Mybosswas
mobile app.
Lift-Bit is a project by Carlo Ratti Associati, developed
with the support of Vitra; Engineering and interaction
design: Opendot; Originally realized in spring 2016 for
Carlo Ratti (IT) is an architect and engineer, who
the ROOMS: Novel Living Concepts exhibition
practices in Italy and teaches at MIT, where he directs
organized by Salone del Mobile.Milano as part of the
the Senseable City Lab. Ratti has co-authored over
XXI Triennale; Carlo Ratti Associati team: Carlo Ratti,
250 publications and holds several patents. His
Giovanni de Niederhausern, Andrea Cassi (project
work has been exhibited in several venues worldwide,
leader), Ina Sefgjini, Damiano Gui, Antonio Atripaldi,
including the Venice Biennale, New York’s MoMA,
Emanuele Protti, Gary Di Silvio, Daniele Belleri; OpenDot
London’s Science Museum, and Barcelona’s Design
team: Alessandro Masserdotti, Fabrizio Pignoloni,
Museum.
www.carloratti.com Vittorio Cuculo.
www.senseable.mit.edu

Tangible Media Group – MIT Media Lab


jamSheets
This work introduces layer jamming as an
enabling technology for designing deformable,
stiffness-tunable, thin sheet interfaces.
Interfaces that exhibit tunable stiffness
properties can yield dynamic haptic feedback
and shape deformation capabilities. Shifting
the focus from designing form to designing
stiffness would enable a new type of
human-object interaction. When the material is
AEC, Florian Voggeneder

soft, one can form it as desired, then switch it


to rigid and let it perform. By switching it back
to soft, one can reshape the material again.
The prototype of jamSheets shows a formal
and functional adaptive furniture: from a
carpet to a table to a chair and back.
Research: Jifei Ou, Lining Yao, Daniel Tauber,
and Hiroshi Ishii
Exhibition: Jifei Ou, Nikolaos Vlavianos, and Hiroshi Ishii

160
ART+COM Studios (DE), Ólafur Arnalds (IS)
Infinite Cube 2006/2010/2013
Infinite Cube is a spatially concentrated but at
the same time expansive kinetic installation.
The spheres follow a computational narrative
that molds them into a fluid succession of
abstract shapes. An optical illusion extends the
apparently clear spatial confines of the
installation into infinity. Viewers are also
reflected in the installation, and their presence
adds an additional layer to the interplay of real
and reflected space. Combined with the
specially composed music by Ólafur Arnalds, a
poetical correlation of the three elements of
reflection, sound, and movement is obtained.
Nils Krueger

ART+COM Studios (DE) designs and develops new media installations and spaces and uses new technology as
an artistic medium of expression and as a medium for the interactive communication of complex information.
Joachim Sauter is a co-founder of ART+COM and Head of Design at ART+COM Studios. artcom.de

161
CPN – Center for the
Promotion of Science
Центар за промоцију
науке (ЦПН)
Belgrade, Serbia

162
CPN – Center for the Promotion of Science, Центар за промоцију науке (ЦПН), иако основан
created only seven years ago, already has пре само седам година, активно развија своју
diverse international cooperations, well међународну сарадњу и партнерства, и креира
established partnerships, and unique јединствене програме и активности.
practices. Through almost 20 EU projects to Учешћем у 20 ЕУ пројеката до сада, Центар
date, the Center aims to bring the best непрекидно покушава да у Србију пренесе и
European initiatives and concepts to Serbia представи најбоље европске иницијативе и
and also to offer creative minds from Serbia концепте, али и да пружи прилику креативним
opportunities to share their results, views и талентованим људима из Србије да покажу
and ideas. своје резултате, домете и идеје.
CPN is a public institution with the mission to Центар за промоцију науке је јавна установа
bridge the gap between science and society основана са циљем да се премости јаз између
by bringing together researchers, educators, науке и грађана, повезивањем и укључивањем
scientists, artists, policy makers, civil society истраживача, научника, едукатора, уметника,
organizations, business and industry, and the доносиоца одлука, невладиних организација,
general public in the process of research and привреде и индустрије у процес истраживања
innovation. The ultimate aim is to influence и иновација. Коначни циљ је прилагођавање
and adapt the general research agendas to општег процеса истраживања стварним
reflect the needs of society and to address потребама друштва и укључивање свих актера
societal challenges, engaging all actors који могу да допринесу решавању друштвених
involved in the process. изазова.
CPN’s most important public resource is Најважнији ресурс Центра јесте Научни
the Science Club, located in the center of клуб који се налази у самом срцу Београда.
Belgrade. It comprises a space for the Састоји се од излагачког простора намењеног
exhibitions, talks, presentations, and изложбама, радионицама, предавањима и
workshops, and also has a makers’ lab другим јавним догађајима, као и од практичне
equipped with tools and machines, such as радионице са алатима и машинама за израду
3D printer and plotter, for production of the експоната, 3Д штампачем и другом опремом.
exhibits. This Club is at the same time part Овај централни клуб је истовремено и део
of the Network of Science Clubs, which Мреже научнх клубова у Србији, коју је такође
was initiated by CPN and currently has 13 покренуо Центар и која тренутно броји 13
members across Serbia. клубова широм Србије.
Center also has its travelling version—Mobile Центар такође поседује и своју покретну
CPN! The crucial parts are SciTruck, with a варијанту – Мобилни ЦПН! Његови кључни
120 square meter exhibition area, and Mobile елементи су Научни камион са излагачким
Planetarium, which can host up to 50 делом од 120 квм и Мобилни планетаријум у
spectators. који може да стане око 50 посетилаца.

163
As a partner of the European Digital Art and Као партнер пројекта ”Европска мрежа
Science Network, CPN successfully infused дигиталне уметности и науке”, ЦПН је
the national scene with fresh and intriguing успешно освојио локалну сцену са свежим
concepts, connecting seemingly opposed и иновативним концептима који повезују
disciplines. Not alone anymore in this attempt, наизглед супротстављене дисциплине.
CPN created links with others involved in У међувремену су се овом покушају и
similar projects: major national research програмима прикључили и други партнери
institutes, Serbian Academy of Sciences and – велике истраживачке организације у
Arts, The Cultural Center of Belgrade, Србији, Српска академија наука и уметности,
independent galleries, platforms and Културни центар Београда, независне галерије,
initiatives, and several art faculties, including платформе и иницијативе, као и неколицина
both public and private institutions, uni- државних и приватних уметничких факултета
versities in Serbia’s capital Belgrade and also из Београда и других градова.
in other towns. Поред знатног искуства у продукцији
With its experience in the production of разноврсних и сложених Art & Science
diverse and complex Art & Science events, програма, ЦПН редовно извештава јавност
CPN regularly communicates news and о новинама и резултатима насталим
outcomes of the intersection between arts, укрштањем уметности, науке и напредних
science and emerging technologies. The технологија. Савремена истраживања,
contemporary research, the interdisciplinary интердисциплинарност и свеприсутни утицај
approach, and the overwhelming influence of расположивих технологија су кључне тачке
advanced technologies are the key messages и главне поруке које ЦПН представља као
that we’re sharing and presenting through the резултате сарадње са Арс електроником,
collaboration with the Ars Electronica, other другим пројектним партнерима и трима
partner organizations, and three major највећим научним организацијама у Европи.
European scientific institutions. cpn.rs/artandscience
cpn.rs/artandscience

164
CPN – Center for the Promotion of Science
Activities

Presentations Presentation of the European Digital Art and


Science Network at the CREAT-IT
Promotion campaign of the open calls International Conference
Presentations, talks, discussions Presentation, paper (abstract)
Belgrade, Serbia Athens, Greece
December 2014 – June 2016 09. – 10.10.2015
Dobrivoje Lale Eric, Slobodan Coba Jovanovic Dobrivoje Lale Eric
Presentation of the project at the open event Presentation of the European Digital Art
during CREAT-IT project meeting and Science Network at the Conference
Presentation Media Archaeology
Rome, Italy Presentation, paper (abstract)
07.03.2015 Belgrade, Serbia (Faculty of Dramatic Arts)
Dobrivoje Lale Eric 29.10.2015
Presentation of the project at Dobrivoje Lale Eric
Creative Europe Conference Presentation of the European Digital Art
Presentation and Science Network at TEDx Novi Sad
Belgrade, Serbia Conference
27. – 28.04.2015 Talk
Dobrivoje Lale Eric Novi Sad, Serbia
Art & Science @ May Month 29.10.2016
of Mathematics (M3) 2015 Dobrivoje Lale Eric
Presentation of the best nine applications
from Serbia and two winners of the national Workshops
selection for 2015/16
Belgrade, Serbia Two educational workshops for the artists,
(Gallery of Science and Technology of the art students and academicians
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts) Workshop
12.05. – 28.05.2015 Belgrade, Serbia (Kolarac Foundation)
Imaginary Maps by Aleksandra Jovanić 16. – 17.12.2015
Frequency Chamber by Bogdan Stefanović Martin Honzik, Veronika Liebl, Dobrivoje
and other 7 shortlisted projects by Lale Eric, Slobodan Coba Jovanovic, Nemanja
Nataša Teofilović, Karolina Mudrinski, Milan Djordjevic, Dragana Ilic, Aleksandra Jovanic,
Lićina, Isidora Todorović, Marija Strajnić, Marija Bogdan Stefanovic, Fernando Comerón
Lipkovski & Miklos Barna, Milos Jez & Dejan (via skype), Jurij Krpan (via skype)
Dimitrijević
Art & Science in Serbia Exhibition
Presentation of the plans, results, and Art + Science Exhibition 2016
outcomes at the national level, at the Exhibition + parallel programs
Conference during Ars Electronica Festival The Cultural Center of Belgrade, Belgrade,
Linz, Austria Serbia
06.09.2015 07. – 27.04.2016
Dobrivoje Lale Eric see Page 166
Art + Science Exhibition 2017
Festival (several exhibitions + parallel programs)
Belgrade, Novi Sad, Kragujevac, Ritopek
27.04. – 25.05.2017
see Page 170

165
Art + Science 2016
Exhibition I
07.04. – 07.05.2016

The first Art + Science Exhibition in Belgrade opened in


April, 2016, and during a month long period over 3,500
visitors had the chance to see two national winning
productions as well as works by several European artists.

The Art + Science program in Belgrade presented two national winning productions
as well as the works by visiting artists Gisela Nunes from Portugal, Werner Jauk
from Austria, Cédric Brandilly from France, and Universal Everything art collective
from UK. Center for the Promotion of Science premiered two winning artworks
within the national selection for 2015. Imaginary Maps and Frequency Chamber,
brilliant installations by Aleksandra Jovanić and Bogdan Stefanović, were presented
at Podroom Gallery, Cultural Center of Belgrade, downtown exhibition space in the
heart of the city. In parallel with the main exhibition, several other events were held,
including lectures, panel discussions, master classes, workshops for art students
and high school children, public tours, 3D printing program etc.
For the closing event at Movie Theater, Cultural Center of Belgrade, two grand
live performances were presented. One by LP Duo, from Quantum Music project,
and the second by Cédric Brandilly and Romain Dubois, who performed their
Architectural SonarWorks. A second exhibition in Belgrade in the framework
of the European Digital Art and Science Network took place in 2017.

Aleksandra Jovanić (RS)


Imaginary Maps
The Idea behind the work is based upon the
potential for transforming recognized
regularities and irregularities in nature and
social sciences into the visualization of
personal narratives. The stories we are made
of, our microcosmoses, can be enlarged
Milovan Milenkovic / CPN

beyond our dimensions—in an immersive


environment—and presented as personal
maps. In this way, links are being created
between our life choices and events, on the
one hand, and what the universe looks like,
on the other.

Aleksandra Jovanić (RS) holds a PhD in Digital Arts and a Diploma in programming. She uses these two related
fields of arts and science on a daily basis, researching internet art and web design, technology of the new media
and interactive media. She is an assistant professor, currently teaching the undergraduate program of the
Faculty of Fine Arts in Belgrade, master studies at the Faculty of Applied Arts, and art doctoral studies at the
University of Arts in Belgrade. She develops web projects for clients, both independently and in teams, and has
been exhibiting in groups and as a solo artist since 2003. aleksandrajovanic.com

166
Bogdan Stefanović (RS)
Frequency Chamber
The idea of the work is based on the
audio-visual presentation of events in the
space at the level of particles and waves,
which make up the entire micro and macro
cosmos. All physical objects around us contain
frequencies and wavelengths. Every star, every
living being, everything is based on a similar
principle, like the story that says that each of
us contains a fraction of the stars that have
created us. Sound and color are linked
because, we can say, they are two almost
identical things: both have their own

Milovan Milenkovic / CPN


frequency, i.e. wavelengths, and both have a
certain spectrum of visible and invisible to
humans, i.e. the sounds we can and cannot
hear. The movements are recorded via a
thermal camera, which is connected with the
specially programmed application.

Bogdan Stefanović (RS) did a masters degree at the Arts Academy in Novi Sad, in the class of Stevan Kojić.
His first video, Life, was presented at exhibitions in Belgrade and Lisbon. In September 2014, he participated in
the art colony “River of Tolerance” in Samokov (BG). In 2015, he started studying quantum physics, which offers
new and very different approaches to art. “Intangible” media have since become the main topics of his research.

Gisela Nunes
Break the Ice
Break the Ice calls for our action, demands a
deep dive into ourselves to find out who we
really are and what surrounds us. In a world
where we are always connected and our steps
constantly captured, monitored, archived,
what do we show to our friends or foes? Our
inner self or our outer self? Does anyone really
know what we think?
Inside the installation, people are detected
over a circular rug in real-time by a Kinect
sensor. The ice cracks depend on the positions
of the users and time they spent there. Their
movements can either make the ice recede,
Milovan Milenkovic / CPN

making a video visible underneath, or make


the ice form. The sound corresponding to the
graphics is also generated in real-time using
overtones, involving the cracks, running water,
and ice formation. Those three synthesized
sounds are marking the three moments of the
interaction in the installation.

Gisela Nunes (PT) is a media artist who focuses on interactive new media art. Her practice explores the object, the
device, and the audience, to present interactive live experiences. While project themes vary, real time processing,
augmented reality, and data visualization make up the backdrop to her work. arianing.eu

167
Werner Jauk (AT)
iHome
iHome / personal home wants to be the
continuation in the gesture-interaction of
human beings with spaces, to a life with
partner-like living spaces. It recognizes the
mood of the person by his/her gestural,
whole-body expression, which primarily
communicates arousal, and adaptively learns
to homeostatically optimize the state of
arousal according to the respective behavioral
change. iHome is thereby an extension of the
hedonic body and leads this way to the social
domain: it creates common places for every
body

Werner Jauk (AT), scientist & media artist, professor at the University of Graz, working on
“pop/music + media/art” and focusing on music as a role model for the media arts. His studies in
experimental aesthetics led him to bridge the gap between science and art, two fields that deal with
how physical bodies adapt to dynamized and coded virtualities. Auditory logic and hedonistic
behavior, formalized in pop/music, serve as explanatory hypotheses.

Cédric Brandilly (FR)


Architectural SonarWorks
feat. Romain Dubois (live)
Immobile architectural elements, which are
the result of human activity, are transposing to
music through specific software package. On
this basis, a new type of sound language
drawn from city map readings is defined. For
Milovan Milenkovic / CPN

the first time, thanks to precise analyses, we


are now capable of creating a sound score of
any urbanized zone. Because they all have
specific urban morphologies, cities will also
have their own language and sound.

Cédric Brandilly (FR) is a visual artist and performer. After studying fine arts and architecture, he continued his
education in the academic section of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid. His first project,
Urne, was performed at the Grand Palais in Lille during the European Contemporary Fair in April 2012. This was
followed by a series of exhibitions in Paris, Brussels, and Rennes. Since then, the philosopher and academician
Michel Serres has taken an interest in Cédric’s work and offered to sponsor him. Romain Dubois (FR) is a versatile
composer and sound engineer. He has composed contemporary dance music, film scores, French songs, pieces
for advertising and radio and focuses in particular on the relationship between rhythm, body, and image in
general, exploring all aspects of these–which he believes are three pieces of the same puzzle.

168
Universal Everything (UK)
Presence
A series of large-scale video pieces of motion-
captured dance performances create abstract forms with
a human presence. A collaboration with choreographer
Benjamin Millepied and the LA Dance Project, the work
continues Universal Everything’s line of enquiry into the
essence of choreography, movement, and the human
form. Commissioned by Media Space London for their
inaugural exhibition, Presence turns the screen into a
stage, the body into an abstracted sculpture.

Milovan Milenkovic / CPN


Experimenting with various materials and forms, the
life-sized moving sculptures cycle through a randomized
collection of “costumes” that range from colorful light
trails to crystalline formations, with only the movement
revealing the human presence within.

Universal Everything (UK)


Walking City
Referencing the utopian visions of 1960s’
architectural group Archigram, Walking City is
a slowly evolving video sculpture. The
language of materials and patterns seen in
Milovan Milenkovic / CPN

radical architecture transform as the nomadic


city walks endlessly, adapting to the
environments she encounters. Winner of Prix
Ars Electronica 2014 Golden Nica: Computer
Animation / Film / VFX.

Universal Everything (UK)


Voxel Posse
Utilizing the powers of 3D printing and
anthropomorphism, Universal Everything
Milovan Milenkovic / CPN

creates a fleet of miniature vector robots.


Looking like crystalline rocks that sprouted
legs, these creatures are yet another
exploration into harnessing the most basic
elements of the human form to infuse
inanimate objects with the essence of life.

Universal Everything (UK) is a digital art and design studio founded by Matt Pyke in 2004. Their work explores
the tension between abstract and figurative form and the synthesis of sound and image, leading to expressive,
vibrant digital work imbued with emergent life and anthropomorphism. Exhibited at Museum of Modern Art
(New York), Media Space and V&A Museum (London), Art HK (Hong Kong), Central Academy of Fine Arts (Beijing),
and Sydney Opera House, among others.

169
Art + Science 2017
Exhibition II
27.04. – 27.05.2107

Quadrature (DE)
MASSES
Motors and Stones Searching for Equilibrium State

Two stones lie on top of a balanced steel plate.


The aim of the machine is to create a perfect
equilibrium state by moving the stones to the
appropriate positions. The concept was
developed during a residency at ESO—the
European Southern Observatory in Chile.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Quadrature (DE)
Orbits
Merging the two sources, balancing between
artistic autonomy and the necessary scientific
rigorousness, the performance is an aesthetic
and intuitive live experiment, revealing this
new layer of human infrastructure.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

170
Quadrature (DE)
Unclassified Objects
One database gathers only classified data,
based on observations of (amateur)
astronomers. It contains identified secret
satellites, but also the ugly by-products of
satellite technology: related space debris and
even some completely unknown objects.

Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Quadrature (DE) is an artists’ collective by Jan Bernstein, Juliane Götz, and Sebastian Neitsch, based in
Berlin. Their artistic exploration gravitates towards scientific interests and physical experiments, using new
technologies or academic research as sources and inspiration. They all share a love for machines and outer
space. quadrature.co

Marija and Milan Ličina (RS)


To the Distant Ones…
To the Distant Ones… represents a generative
interactive audio-visual experience with
narrative properties indicating issues of
potential methods of communication with
other intelligent beings. Exploring language,
forms of non-verbal communication, and
stylization, the work examines the constant
drive for the harmonization of human relations.
The installation does not present a utopic view
of humanity, instead posing questions of
whether we can become like this and present
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

ourselves in the best possible light to all those


that (may) come.

Marija Ličina (RS) works as an independent designer and part of the Hostile Takeover Visual Lab team. Her fields
of research are in traditional and computer animation, video production, illustration, and graphics design.
Milan Ličina (RS) is an assistant professor at the Faculty of Digital Arts of Metropolitan University in Belgrade. He
is the founder of the Hostile Takeover Visual Lab, part of the design team at the creative collective Galerija 12+,
participant in several group exhibits, and author of several independent performances.

171
Isidora Todorović (RS)
Horologium Nocturnum
Horologium Nocturnum is a spatial installation
consisting of three hanging geometric elements
with water dripping through them. It has been
developed based on the water clock principle,
where water is the unit of measure (factual and
symbolic) of a given phenomenon that affects
humans. Each object has been shaped as a
generated fractal, showing the probability for the
occurrence of three events, along with the three
symbolic times they measure, through the amount
of dripping water. In the context of this

Ivan Zupanc / CPN


installation, water is seen twofold, as the symbolic
flow of three times (human time, Earth time and
solar time).

Isidora Todorović (RS). Her work explores the technological, culturological, and political context of
art, in the context of biopolitical theory, post-feminism, and DIY culture. She often uses the format of
political social games, interactive installations, and socially engaged projects as a means of
expression. Isidora completed basic and master studies at the Department of New Media at the
Academy of Arts in Novi Sad, where she is currently an assistant professor. isidoratodorovic.com

Quantum Music
feat. LP Duo (live)
EU project

The project Quantum Music is a meeting


point of quantum physics and music. The
project was initiated with the aim to explore
the relations between music and quantum
physics, which would result in a creation of a
completely new, scientifically founded
musical genre—Quantum Music. Aside from
constructing the new electronic music
instrument which will be used exclusively for
Quantum Music performances, the final
stage of the project is a Quantum Music Live
concert performed by LP Duo, who play on
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

modified acoustic pianos directly connected


to computer simulations of quantum systems
and quantum experimental equipment.
quantummusic.org
Quantum Music was presented twice in Art+Science
2016 / 2017

LP Duo (RS) was founded in 2004 by the pianists Sonja Loncar and Andrija Pavlovic. LP Duo has performed in
Serbia, The Netherlands, Germany, Slovenia, Croatia, Denmark, Switzerland, Finland, Macedonia, San Marino,
Poland, Italy, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, US (Carnegie Hall), and Singapore.

172
Saša Spačal, Mirjan Švagelj, Anil Podgornik (SI)
Myconnect
“For to connect is to affirm, and to affirm, to
connect”. (John Rajchman)
Myconnect is a symbiotic interspecies
connector that questions the anthropocentric
nature-human division. With its circuit of
signals and impulses, generated and
translated by biological and technological
organisms, Myconnect performs an immersive
experience of symbiotic interdependence.
Through this experience the technological
nature-human distinction can be seen as an
arbitrary definition that serves particular
biopolitical interests in human society, which
can then be shamelessly wrapped in an
ideology of utilitarianism and may conceal
excessive exploitation.

Saša Spačal (SI) is a post-media artist with a background in the humanities. She currently works at the intersection
of living systems research, contemporary and sound art. Her work focuses on a post-human environment, in which
humans exist and function as one of the elements in an ecosystem, and not as its sovereign. agapea.si
Mirjan Švagelj (SI) is a doctor of biomedicine currently residing in Ljubljana and working for a biotech research
and development laboratory. He finished his doctoral studies in Biomedicine at the University of Ljubljana in the
field of medicinal mushrooms. Anil Podgornik (SI) is a DIY enthusiast with a big talent for electronics, mechanics,
and physics. Since 2012 he has been a part of the Mycophone_genus and Myconnect project.

raum.null (RS, AT)


Dark Wind Trilogy
feat. Mussurunga (live)

Quadrature (2014), with White Sample


The Sixth Wave of Mass Extinction (2015),
with Didi Bruckmayr
Chant of The Proto-Alchemists (2016),
with Mussurunga
Radical art as something that expresses
important topics in a very basic and
understandable way, maybe also in a loud and
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

expressive way, is an important strategy to


make the audience aware of a pressing
socio-political topic. So if you want to use this
as a strategy, it is important to act and think
strategically, choose the right situation, and
work it out thoroughly.

raum.null are sound artists Dobrivoje Milijanovic (RS) and Chris Bruckmayr (AT). Mussurunga is Siegmar
Aigner (AT) – performer, opera singer, and Kyma scientist. The name raum.null (space zero) refers to the potential
existence of an existential Nil, a hidden force field inside the hole of a three-dimensional torus, a scientific model
describing the shape of the universe. The members of raum.null are sonic archeologists, isolating drones, and
their hidden pulses (the basic grooves) out of this primal soup of noise. raumnull.tumblr.com

173
Shinseungback Kimyonghun (KR)
Flower
Flower presents a series of distorted flower
images that have still been recognized as
“flowers” by a computer. The project attempts
to examine computer vision and human vision
by showing a distorted subject. The
technology used for the project is the Google
object recognition system, which is regarded
as one of the best computer vision
technologies in the world.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Shinseungback Kimyonghun (KR)


Cat or Human
Human faces recognized as cat faces by a cat
face detection algorithm. Cat faces recognized
as human faces by a human face detection
algorithm.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Shinseungback Kimyonghun (KR) is a Seoul-based artistic duo consisting of computer engineer Shin Seung Back
and artist Kim Yong Hun. Their collaborative practice explores the impact of technology on humanity.

174
Alex Guevara (PE)
ÑOQAYKU
ÑOQAYKU is an ongoing research project by
Alex Guevara resulting in a series of animated
pictures about the armed conflict that took
place in Peru during the years 1980–2000.
ÑOQAYKU, through images and sounds, seeks
to facilitate identification with the victims of
the conflict, implying that they were not the
others, that they were us.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Alex Guevara (PE)


UNIT Live
UNIT is an audiovisual live performance. It’s a
compilation of previous audiovisual pieces by
Alex Guevara.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Alex Guevara (PE) is a digital artist born in Lima and currently based in Berlin. He works in a wide range of fields
including digital art, interaction design, data and real time music visualization, generative design, interactive
installations, combining art and technology to create immersive experiences and landscapes. alex-guevara.com

175
Azucena Giganto, Guillermo Casado (ES)
Deep Life
Deep Life is an interactive installation that
explores and reflects on the life and structure
of the processes and relationships between
living things that allow life to happen. The
network of relationships can be observed at
different scales—micro and macroscopic—and
it is also something alive in itself, sensitive to
the presence of visitors, it mutates and reacts

Ivan Zupanc / CPN


unpredictably as an analogy to the
interventions and actions of human beings
in Nature.

Azucena Giganto (ES), graduate in Fine Arts of Universidad Complutense, Madrid. Her main tool for investigation
and expression is image in movement, especially in digital media and new technologies. azuzen.com
Guillermo Casado (ES) is a multimedia designer, engineer, and digital artist specialized in interactive media, and
is currently based in Madrid. His work is located in an area where several disciplines and philosophies converge:
art, science, technology, sociology, play, experiment, learning... peripecio.com

Paolo Cirio, Alessandro Ludovico (IT)


Face to Facebook
The project addressed surveillance, privacy
and the economy of social media monopolies
as well as art interventions within global
media. During the performance the artwork
received over a thousand mentions in the
international press, eleven legal threats, five
death threats, and several letters from the
lawyers of Facebook.
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

Paolo Cirio (IT) uses popular language, irony, interventions, and seductive visuals to engage a wide public in
critical issues and sophisticated works of art. Cirio’s artworks have been presented and exhibited in major art
institutions. He has won a number of awards, among others Golden Nica first prize at Ars Electronica and
Transmediale second prize. paolocirio.net
Alessandro Ludovico (IT) is a researcher and an artist and has been chief editor of Neural magazine since 1993.
He is an associate professor at the Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton, and lecturer at Parsons
Paris – The New School. He has published and edited several books, and has lectured worldwide. neural.it

176
Dragan Ilić
Cluster Z-III / RoboAction live
Inspired by investigations in contemporary
physics into the multiverse, the artist drew on
paper with amplified sound, simultaneously
projecting images onto moving balloons. The
artist performed in a specially constructed
simulated “Virtual Reality” suit with attached
TV helmet.
“Physics and mathematics inform my work. I
explore in visual and aural terms the power of

Bojan Zivojinovic / CPN


technology—manual and robotic—in
collaboration with human volition and
intuition. My work considers the threshold
between our quasi-android relationship with
tools today and the robotics of tomorrow.”

Dragan Ilić (RS, AU, US) is an artist who lives and works in New York and Belgrade. He has participated in many
group exhibitions and festivals and has had numerous international solo appearances and exhibitions. Dragan
initiated and constructed the ITS-Z1 (International Test Site-Z1) in Ritopek as an independent art space/laboratory
where artists and scientists of all levels from around the world can meet, brainstorm, experiment, create, and
ultimately promote new ideas in a vast array of fields. The goal of the art space/lab is to address the
advancement of global cultural interaction. draganilic.org

Dušan Rodić (RS), Mi-Ah Rödiger (DE),


Timo Preece (US)
Tuning In
“My brain is only a receiver, in the Universe
there is a core from which we obtain
knowledge, strength, and inspiration. I have
not penetrated into the secrets of this core,
but I know that it exists.”
(Nikola Tesla)

Step into the process of light becoming


energy, transforming into sound. Look into
your shadow, find the frequency, remember it.
Tune in every day.

Dušan Rodić (RS) is a visual artist from Belgrade who currently lives and works in Berlin. Rodić creates
sculptures and art installations by remaking everyday functional objects. dusanrodic.com
Mi-Ah Rödiger (DE) is a German visual artist. Mi-Ah’s body-related sculptures and jewelry are
metamorphoses of natural organic forms into surreal, expressive art objects through which she
examines human emotions, dreams, and desires. mi-ah.com
Timo Preece (US) is a sound designer, musician, audio technologist, and multi-media consultant,
and is one-half of the audio/visual unit Planetary Cymatic Resonance (PCR). gravityterminal.com

177
Karkatag (RS)
From Safety to Where?
The interactive installation From Safety to
Where? is an invitation to an un-safe game,
where you as an individual will probably suffer
no consequences but will take part in physical
destruction and the creation of un-safe
conditions and the illusion of risk. In this
sense, the work is evocative of a specific

Ivan Zupanc / CPN


childhood experience—taking part in
forbidden games and irresponsible activities,
not thinking of the consequences.

Karkatag (RS) is a Belgrade based art collective, created in 2009, which focuses on theoretical and practical
work in the field of interactive art and new media, intersecting with performative. The group constructs specially
designed machines, interactive and autonomous installations and objects that trigger audience participation.
Karkatag has participated in numerous events, exhibitions, festivals, and performances all over Europe, and has
run Praksa makerspace Belgrade at Magacin cultural center since 2015. karkatag.org

Nick Sousanis (US)


Unflattening

Unflattening, the doctoral dissertation


defended in 2014 at the University of
Columbia, is written and drawn entirely as
comics. Through this amazing work of
graphical art, the author Nick Sousanis defies
conventional forms of scholarly discourse with
a serious inquiry into the ways humans
construct knowledge.
Unflattening is an insurrection against the
fixed viewpoint. Weaving together diverse
ways of seeing drawn from science,
philosophy, art, literature, and mythology,
Sousanis uses the collage-like capacity of
comics to show that perception is always an
active process of incorporating and
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

reevaluating different vantage points. His


vibrant, constantly morphing images connect
in nonlinear fashion to other visual references,
becoming allusions, allegories, and motifs,
pitting realism against abstraction.

Nick Sousanis (US) is a comics’ artist and educator, and a professor of Humanities and Liberal Studies at
San Francisco State University. spinweaveandcut.com

178
CREATIONS
feat. primary schoolchildren from Belgrade and Ruki Krstur (live)
EU project
Among the current CPN projects, a special
place is held by those dedicated to improving
teaching at schools and supporting
interdisciplinary cooperation among teachers.
If we were to go a step further, we could ask
the following: Can math and music teachers
hold classes together? Do drama skills have
any value in the chemistry classroom? Is a
scientific opera at all possible?
The answers to these and many other
dilemmas in connecting and intertwining arts
and science in the educational process are
offered by the large scale European project

Bojan Zivojinovic / CPN


CREATIONS. Financed through the EU program
Horizon 2020, it gathers various institutions,
universities, associations, and institutes
engaged in creativity and science education in
eleven European countries—Germany,
Switzerland, Spain, Great Britain, Greece,
Norway, Finland, Malta, France, Sweden, and
Serbia. creations-project.eu

Tanja Vujinović (RS/SI)


Universal Objects
Exhibition

At the Gallery of Science and Technology of


the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts,
Tanja Vujinović exhibited five works from the
Universal Objects cycle: Park 1, Park 2, Garden,
Observers, and Levitations. These are works
created in real-time computer game
environments. The digital world is taken over
by mutated objects, creating a space for
contemplation and relaxation. Visitors can
enjoy chance walks or embark on an unlimited
exploration of space; through the use of a
keyboard, anyone’s avatar may systematically
Ivan Zupanc / CPN

discover the author’s virtual world. Through


her work, Tanja is analyzing the relationship
between awareness and technology, through
digital animism and contemplative play.

Tatjana Tanja Vujinović Kušelj (RS/SI) graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts in Belgrade in 1999, has been a
guest student at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, and holds a PhD in Philosophy and Theory of Visual Culture
from the Faculty of Humanities Koper. Since 1997 she has participated in 140 collective and 29 individual
international exhibitions including galleries and museums. She lives and works in Ljubljana. ultramono.org

179
DIG gallery
Košice, Slovakia

180
“We are into progressive and innovative, we „Sledujeme progresívne a inovatívne, zaujíma
are interested in what is contemporary or nás aktuálne a strategické – od lokálnej kultúry
strategic—from the local culture through the cez horizont kreatívnej industrializácie, až po
horizon of creative industrialization to the globalizovaný umelecký kontext. New Media
globalized artistic context New Media Folklore.“
Folklore.”
DIG gallery bola založená zoskupením DIG v
DIG gallery was founded by DIG group in 2012 roku 2012 a osadená v rámci brownfieldu
and was settled within the brownfield of the bývalej tabakovej továrne v Košiciach. Ako
former tobacco factory in Košice. As a neziskový projekt zameraný na prezentáciu,
nonprofit project that is aimed at the edukáciu a propagáciu interdisciplinarity a
presentation, education, and promotion of súčasného mediálneho umenia patrí DIG
interdisciplinarity and contemporary media gallery k prvým galériám svojho druhu na
art, DIG gallery is one of the first of its kind in Slovensku. Paralelné artistické zoskupenie DIG
Slovakia. A parallel activity—Digital (Digital Intervention Group) bolo založené
Intervention Group (DIG)—was founded by a skupinou entuziastických umelcov v roku 2009
group of enthusiastic artists in 2009 as a ako platforma pre autorský výskum a aplikáciu
platform for author’s research and application nových foriem mediálneho umenia.
of the new forms of media art. Podstatnú časť dramaturgie DIG gallery tvoria
A crucial part of the DIG gallery dramaturgy okrem domácich a zahraničných exhibícií
includes, in addition to local and international workshopy a špecifické koedukačné formáty. V
exhibitions, workshops and specific co-editing archíve výstav, ktoré sú venované rôznym
formats. In the archive of exhibitions devoted oblastiam media artu, musíme upozorniť najmä
to various fields of media arts, we need to na emblematickú exhibíciu z roku 2013: Media
highlight in particular the 2013 flagship arts / Made in Japan, ktorá bola zároveň prvým
exhibition: Media arts / Made in Japan, which živým kontaktom medzi DIG gallery a
was also the first live contact between the DIG unikátnym festivalom Ars Electronica.
gallery and the unique Ars Electronica Festival. Jedným z hlavných poslaní DIG gallery je
One of the main DIG gallery missions is networking na lokálnej a medzinárodnej úrovni
networking on a local and international level podporujúci komunikáciu medzi partnermi a to
that promotes communication between nielen v zóne umenia a vedy. V prípravnej fáze
partners not only within the art and science jedinečného projektu European Digital Art &
area. In the preparatory phase of the unique Science Network bola v roku 2015 v DIG
European Digital Art & Science Network, a gallery realizovaná úspešná výstava s názvom
successful exhibition called No Pain No Game No Pain No Game, ktorá v našej geografickej
was held in DIG gallery in 2015, and there was zóne prispela k výraznej medializácii danej
significant media coverage of this topic in our témy.
geographical area.

181
A wider concept of the exhibitions called Art & Širšie koncipovaná séria výstav pod názvom
Science / vol. 1 – 3 (Oct 2016 – Jan 2017) had a Art & Science / vol. 1 – 3 (október 2016 – január
similar initiation character and presented 2017) mala obdobný iniciačný charakter a
spectacular but also miniature works by eight predstavila spektakulárne, ale aj miniatúrne
foreign and five Slovak media artists. diela 8 zahraničných a 5 domácich mediálnych
The Creative Playgrounds exhibition (Jul – Sept umelcov.
2017) consisted of modular compatible units, Pripravovaná výstava Creative Playgrounds (júl
including presentations of foreign media art – september 2017) pozostáva z modulárnych
platforms as well as the network partner kompatibilných celkov, vrátane prezentácií
activities. The concept of the exhibition could zahraničných media art platforiem a aktivít
be characterized by such terms as variable, partnerov networku. Koncept výstavy
processual, but also some very specific topics charakterizujú pojmy ako variabilita,
for which the multidisciplinary “thinking” and procesuálnosť, ako aj značne konkrétne témy,
“action” are significant. pre ktoré sú signifikantné práve
Since 2013, DIG gallery has been collaborating multidisciplinárne „myslenie“ a „akcia“.
with Dive Buki publishers on the production of Od roku 2013 kooperuje DIG gallery s
the ENTER+ |Creative Manual that focuses on vydavateľstvom Dive Buki v rámci produkcie
promoting contemporary media art. Since „kreatívnych manuálov – ENTER“, ktoré sú
2016, DIG gallery has been collaborating with zamerané na propagáciu súčasnej media
the K.A.I.R. (Košice Artist in Residence) and artovej tvorby. Od roku 2016 ponúka DIG
Technical University of Košice (TUKE) for the gallery spolu s organizáciou K.A.I.R. a
residencies of scientists and artists, in various Technickou univerzitou v Košiciach (TUKE)
combinations. Regarding the impact on the rezidencie pre vedcov a umelcov, a to v
local environment, there is equally important rôznych kombináciách. Z pohľadu impaktu pre
contact with the academic field (Faculty of lokálne prostredie je nemenej dôležitý kontakt
Arts TUKE, CIT FEI TUKE), with CIKE (Creative s akademickým prostredím (Fakulta umení
Industry Košice), and other partners such as TUKE, CIT FEI TUKE), s organizáciou CIKE
K13, Tabačka Kulturfabrik, and White Night (Creative Industry Košice) a ďalšími partnermi
Košice. The results of these activities were ako K13, Tabačka Kulturfabrik alebo Biela noc
evaluated in 2017 to support the bid to Košice. Výsledky týchto aktivít boli zhodnotené
designate Košice as a UNESCO Creative City v roku 2017, keď mesto Košice vyhlásilo svoju
of Media Arts. kandidatúru v rámci prestížneho titulu
Finally, we believe that the long-term interest UNESCO Creative City of Media arts.
of DIG gallery in the development of innovative Napokon veríme, že dlhodobý záujem DIG
cultural strategies will result in the production gallery o rozvoj inovatívnych kultúrnych
of original outputs not only in the artistic field, stratégií bude mať za následok generovanie
but also within other disciplines, and the originálnych výstupov nielen na poli umenia,
distance between local and global will become ale aj v rámci jednotlivých vedeckých disciplín
even more irrelevant. diggallery.sk a vzdialenosť medzi lokálnym a globálnym
Text: Richard Kitta, Michal Murin bude ešte zanedbateľnejšia. diggallery.sk

182
Nikolas Bernáth

DIG gallery, Media Art, CZ, 2016


Dávid Hanko

No Pain No Game, DIG gallery, 2015

183
Art & Science / vol. 1 – 3
Exhibition series
Vol. 1: 01.10. – 31.10.2016
Vol. 2: 01.11. – 30.11.2016
Vol. 3: 01.12. – 31.12.2016 (prolonged till 31.01.2017)

This Art & Science exhibition series was a kind of a challenge


for the Slovak audience, because there are still not so many
existing parallels within the domestic culture context.

A series of three specific international exhibitions at DIG gallery exposed the art works by eight
foreign artists and five Slovak artists who oscillate between the contemporary art zone and areas
of scientific research. An Art & Science topic is quite an intuitive area, even for the local artists
and scientists, so we chose a co-education-like format and the exhibition also presented the
goals of the the European Digital Art & Science Network.

Art & Science / vol. 1 Art & Science / vol. 2 Art & Science / vol. 3
01.10. – 31.10.2016 01.11. – 30.11.2016 01.12. – 31.12.2016
Vol. 1 curated by: Vol. 2 curated by: Michal Murin, (prolonged till 31.01.2017)
Richard Kitta, Michal Murin Richard Kitta Vol. 3 curated by: Richard Kitta,
Matej Ivan
Projects by: Projects by: Projects by:

Cédric Brandilly (FR) Universal Everything (UK) Jonathan Keep (UK)


Ursula Damm, Dana Zelig (IL) Universal Everything (UK)
Klaus Fritze (DE)
Ján Gašparovič (SK) Michael Burk,
Soichiro Mihara (JP) Ann Katrin Krenz (DE)
Matej Vakula (SK/US)
Daniel Mikolajčák (SK/AT) Michal Murin (SK)
Digital Intervention
Group (SK)

184
Art & Science / vol 2
Matej Vakula (US/SK)
Well Plate Utopias
Well Plate Utopias (2016) uses
nanoparticle-based experimental cancer drugs
to project images of Thomas More’s Utopian
Alphabet, on cancer tissues grown in Petri
dishes. The Alphabet was part of More’s
masterpiece, Utopia (1516), which is one of the
most influential books in the Western
philosophical and literary tradition. Let’s think
about the concept of Utopia as a fruitful path,
rather than a destination. Let’s draw a
compelling parallel between nanotechnolo-
gies, scientific gaze, and the laboratory as a
place where the future and its relationship to Veronika Židová

contemporary society, culture, humanity’s


hope for disease treatment, and continuity of
life is created.

Matej Vakula (US/SK) is an artist, educator, curator, theorist, programmer, & DIY enthusiast who specializes in
data visualization, bio and urban issues and is based at Open Source Space Administration Institute, Public
Laboratory for Open Technology & Science, CLAKULA Art Productions.

Art & Science / vol 2


Ján Gašparovič (SK)
Ungraspable
Ungraspable consists of a few boxes that
create electro-shelters from our modern
paranoia of an electro-smog that is constantly
being recalled by a special measuring device.
Nikolas Bernáth

Ján Gašparovič (SK) is a multimedia artist based in Žilina, Slovakia. He is interested in the creation of objects,
environments, and performing arts, crossing the boundaries between the fields of art and science, and reflecting
various social and cultural aspects. He is also a director and curator of Plusmínusnula Gallery, Žilina, Slovakia.

185
Art & Science / vol 3
Digital Intervention Group (SK)
CORE LABs
CORE LABs platform, initiated in 2014, is an
open source laboratory environment with
functional architecture, autonomous sub-
environments, and individual real-time systems
for generating the multiple unexpected
interactions. It provides tools for individual
interdisciplinary research and the creation of
artistic and/or scientific outputs.

Matej Ivan

DIG -Digital Intervention Group (SK) was established in 2009 in Košice, Slovakia, by artists and associated
members as an open artistic platform and an interactive platform between contemporary arts and science. It
focuses on building and developing specific media art projects. The CORE LABs concept was developed by
DIG core members Richard Kitta, Matej Ivan, and Martin Kolčak.

Art & Science / vol 3


Dark Matter Spray
Michal Murin (SK)

Dark Matter Spray (2016) is an interactive


performance project which uses the hybrid
VVVV programming software and infrared
sensor interface in the shape of the spray can.
Users can create a digital black matter that
interferes with selected images from the ESA
photo archive. The concept is based on the
illusion of the correction of the light level (the
Lukáš Matejka (TRAKT)

absence of the light particles) while implanting


the black digital matter in the 2D image area.
Technical support: Lukáš Matejka, Pavol
Soukal.

Michal Murin (SK) works in the field of conceptual and sound art, installation and action art. He is a curator at
DIG gallery in Košice (since 2012) and head of Digital Media Studio at FVU in Banská Bystrica (since 2005) and of
New Media Studio at FU TU Košice (since 2011), focusing on interactive art, sound art, video art, game art, and art
& science. He is editor of Profile – Contemporary Art and the interdisciplinary magazine ENTER on new
technologies in art, computer and digital art.

186
From Art – Through Science –
To Creative Industry (and back)
Art & Science Conference
24.11.2016
University Library, Technical University of Košice, Slovakia
Nikolas Bernáth

Michal Vasiľ
The international Art & Science Conference Speakers
presented the various examples of
Martin Honzik (AT), Ars Electronica, Linz
interdisciplinary thinking of today, as well as
the possibility of linking the areas that may Mairéad Hurley (IE), Science Gallery, Dublin
seem incompatible at first sight. The event Erik Lale Dobrivoje (RS), Center for the
showed the non-traditional approaches of Promotion of Science, Belgrade
scientists, artists, and creative teams that Ljiljana Ilić (RS), Center for the Promotion of
are—in addition to innovative concepts or Science, Belgrade
strategies—able to generate also the products Ján Michlík (SK) / Slovanet, Creanet
of global importance. The main goal of František Babič (SK), Department of
cooperation among DIG (within the European Cybernetics and Artificial Intelligence, TUKE
Digital Art & Science Network project), CIKE –
Tomáš Boroš (SK), Department Of
Creative Industry Košice, and Faculty of Arts
Architecture, Faculty of Arts, TUKE
TUKE was to create an open discussion
platform focusing on contemporary issues of Michal Murin (SK), New Media Studio,
the Creative Industries. Faculty of Arts, TUKE
Boris Vaitovič (SK), New Media Studio,
Faculty of Arts, TUKE
Richard Kitta (SK), DIG gallery, Košice

187
Zaragoza City of
Knowledge Foundation
Fundación
Zaragoza Ciudad del
Conocimiento
Zaragoza, Spain

Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation is La Fundación Zaragoza Ciudad del


a private non-profit foundation founded in Conocimiento es una fundación privada sin
2004. Its founding objectives include the ánimo de lucro fundada en 2004. Entre sus
dissemination, at all levels in the city of objetivos fundacionales se encuentran difundir
Zaragoza, of the progress made by the en todos los ámbitos de la ciudad de Zaragoza
knowledge society to construct a more los avances de la sociedad del conocimiento
participative, equalitarian, inclusive, and para construir una sociedad más abierta,
innovative society, open to the new participativa, igualitaria, inclusiva, innovadora
development expectations offered by the y abierta a las nuevas expectativas de
intersection of art, science and technology. desarrollo que ofrece la intersección del arte,
We thus place special emphasis on scientific la ciencia y la tecnología. Para ello ponemos
dissemination among younger people, on the especial énfasis en la divulgación científica
fight to overcome the digital gaps for citizens entre lo más jóvenes, en luchar por la
with a greater risk of social exclusion, and on superación de las brechas digitales a aquellos
promoting the inclusion of women into the ciudadanos con mayor riesgo de exclusión
scientific-technological field. social y favorecer la incorporación de la mujer
The Foundation headquarters has been en el ámbito científico-tecnológico.
located, since 2013, in Etopia Centre for Art Desde 2013, la Fundación tiene su sede en
and Technology, a municipal space of the Etopia Centro de Arte y Tecnología, un espacio
city of Zaragoza intended for learning, sharing, municipal de la ciudad de Zaragoza destinado
and enjoying the capacities of creative a aprender, compartir y disfrutar las
technology, citizen science, the possibilities capacidades de la tecnologías creativas, la
offered by digital culture, and as a center ciencia ciudadana, las posibilidades que
for multi-disciplinary production. ofrece la cultura digital, y como centro de
producción multidisciplinar.

188
As a content agent for Etopia, the educational Como agente de contenidos para Etopia,
programs of the Foundation with creative actualmente, los programas educativos de la
technologies currently enjoy great prestige, Fundación con tecnologías creativas gozan
particularly in the field of child-youth de gran prestigio, pero especialmente en el
education, with our Etopia Kids program. campo de la educación infanto-juvenil, con
At another level, the Foundation develops nuestro programa Etopia Kids. A otro nivel,
projects that address artistic and digital desarrolla proyectos que abordan la creación
creation in the public space or new forms of artística y digital en el espacio o nuevas
cognition and perception with technological, formas de cognición y percepción con
interfaces. Furthermore, in 2017, the interfaces tecnológicos. Además, en 2017
Foundation was ready to set up permanent lanzará grupos de trabajo permanentes que
working groups that will address areas such aborden áreas como la innovación educativa,
as educational innovation, technology and tecnología y mujer, y un grupo de
women, as well as an audiovisual experi- experimentación audiovisual. Todo ello desde
mentation group. All of this is carried out with un enfoque transversal, procurando que
a cross-cutting approach, in an attempt to ciudadanos de diferentes perfiles académicos
involve citizens with different professional y profesionales colaboren en un proyecto
and academic profiles in a common project común y compartan saberes.
and to share know-how. Pero un salto cualitativo de la Fundación ha
The Foundation also made a qualitative leap in sido formar parte desde 2015 de la Red
2015 when it joined the European Digital Art Europea de Arte Digital y Ciencia (EDASN).
and Science Network (EDASN). Participating in Para la Fundación participar en esta red es
this network is a real challenge for the todo un desafío. En 2016 produjo la exposición
Foundation. In 2016, it produced the Reverberadas – Reverberations: Explorations
Reverberadas – Reverberations: Exploration about Science and Art, que indagaba cómo la
about Science and Art exhibition, which ciencia puede ser una fuente de inspiración
studied how science can be a source of para el arte y cómo el arte puede apelar a la
inspiration for art, and how art can explore exploración de las nuevas fronteras de la
the new frontiers of science. In 2017 the ciencia. Ahora en 2017 está desarrollando el
BIOESTETICA project was developed. The aim proyecto BIOESTETICA, con el que a través de
is to show the public at large how the impact residencias artísticas, talleres, conferencias,
of the biotechnological revolution is going to un ciclo de cine y una exposición de bioarte
change and alter classical notions of what we titulada Posnaturaleza; se buscará acercar al
know as human and nature—through artistic gran público cómo el impacto de la revolución
residencies, workshops, lectures, a film cycle, biotecnológica va a cambiar y alterar nociones
and a bioart exhibition, entitled Postnatures. clásicas de lo que conocemos como lo
In short, the European network has enabled humano y la naturaleza.
us to expand our programs from a local to an En definitiva, la Red europea, ha permitido a
international sphere, exchanging experiences la Fundación ensanchar sus programas desde
with other centers and spaces of prestige that local a la esfera internacional, intercambiar
address the connection between science and experiencias con otros centros y espacios de
art, and to consolidate our position as a prestigio que abordan la conexión entre
content production agent for Etopia—a line ciencia y arte, y afianzar su posición como
of work that the Foundation will continue to agente de producción de contenidos para
develop and foster over the coming years. Etopia. Una línea de trabajo que la Fundación
www.fundacionzcc.org; www.etopiakids seguirá desarrollando y potenciando en los
próximos años.
www.fundacionzcc.org; www.etopiakids

189
Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation
Activities

Exhibitions
Reverberadas / Reverberations
Reverberadas / Reverberations Symposium
Exhibition Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Etopia Center of Art and Technology 20.05.2016
20.05. – 18.09.2016 Panel 2: Symbiotic Practices or
see Page193 Inspiring Mirrors?
BIOESTETICA Erich Prem (FEAT), Francisco Castejón (CIEMAT),
Exhibition: Postnature Diego Guitérrez (University of Zaragoza) and
Etopia Center of Art and Technology Javier Cenarro (CEFCA)
21.09.2017 – 13.01.2018 Reverberadas / Reverberations
see Page 199 Symposium
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
20.05.2016
Conferences Talk
Reverberadas / Reverberations Art and Science: connections
Symposium and interferences
Etopia Center of Art and Technology Karin Ohlenschläger (LABoral)
20.05.2016 Reverberadas / Reverberations
Panel 1: The role of cultural institutions Symposium
in art-science converge. Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Martin Honzik (Ars Electronica), Karin 20.05.2016
Ohlenschläger (LABoral), Jurij Krpan (Kapelica Talk
Gallery), Aisling Murray (Science Gallery Dublin), The Art and Science of Falling
Robert Devčić (GV Art London) and Eric Michael Doser (CERN)
Dobrivoje Lale (Center for the Promotion
of Science) Reverberadas / Reverberations
Symposium
Reverberadas / Reverberations Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Symposium 20.05.2016
Etopia Center of Art and Technology Performance: Live Set
20.05.2016 Santiago Latorre
Talk
Art and Technology from Engineering Reverberadas / Reverberations
José Ramón Beltrán (University of Zaragoza) Symposium
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Reverberadas / Reverberations 20.05.2016
Symposium Performance
Etopia Center of Art and Technology Tryptic in Time
20.05.2016 Jaime de los Ríos and Ibon Gurrutxaga
Performance: Data Drops
Mar Canet & Varvara Guljajeva

190
BIOESTETICA Workshops
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
BIOESTETICA
21.09.2017
Workshop
Panel: exhibition introduction
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Daniel López del Rincón (curator), Brandon
05.05.2017, 06.05.2017
Ballengée (artist), Laurent Mignonneau (artist),
Algorithm Nature
and Marina Nuñez (artist)
Jaime de los Ríos
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA
Conference
Workshop
Natural Science Museum of Zaragoza University
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
18.10.2017
02.06.2017, 03.06.2017
CRISPR, the future of genomic writing
Bioknowledge
Lluis Montoliu (CSIC)
Paula Pin and Laura Benitez
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA
Conference
Workshop
25.10.2017
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Natural Science Museum of Zaragoza University
26.06 – 28.07.2017
Anthropocene: Human Impact in Today
Robotic Garden
Ecosystems
Pablo Aliaga, Francisco Doroste y Fátima
Fernando Valladares (CSIC) and Blas Valero
Akrache
(CSIC)
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA
Workshop
Conference
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Natural Science Museum of Zaragoza University
26.06 – 28.07.2017
09.11.2017
Microlab
Metallic Organ compounds
Cristina Hernández y Miriam Escos
Concepción Gimeno (UZ-CSIC)
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA
Workshop
Conference
Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Natural Science Museum of Zaragoza University
October – November 2017
15.11.2017
Biocopists
An Aesthetic of Concentration
Cristina Hernández
Laura Benitez (Curator and researcher)

BIOESTETICA
Conference
Natural Science Museum of Zaragoza University
22.11.2017
It’s Time for Chthulu
Helena Torres (Artist)

191
Film Screening
BIOESTETICA BIOESTETICA
Film Screening and debate. Film Screening.
Etopia Center of Art and Technology Zaragoza Filmothek
19.10.2017 10.11.2017, 24.11.2017
Splice (Vincenzo Natali, 2009) The Fly (Kurt Newmann, 1958)

BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA Film Screening and debate.
Film Screening. Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Zaragoza Filmothek 16.11.2017
20.10.2017 The Clone returns Home (Kanji Nakajima, 2008).
Island of Lost Souls (Erle C. Kenton, 1932)
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA Film Screening.
Film Screening and debate. Zaragoza Filmothek
Etopia Center of Art and Technology 17.11.2017 (+ debate), 01.12.2017
26.10.2017 The Fly (David Cronenberg, 1986)
Gattaca (Andrew Niccol, 1997)
BIOESTETICA
BIOESTETICA Film Screening and debate.
Film Screening. Etopia Center of Art and Technology
Zaragoza Filmothek 11.01.2018
27.10.2017 (+debate), 09.11.2017 Blade Runner (Ridley Scott, 1982)
Frankenstein (James Whale, 1931)

192
Cycle I: Reverberadas
Exhibition
20.05.2016 – 18.09.2016

Reverberadas was the exhibition of the Zaragoza City


of Knowledge Foundation for Etopia Center of Art and
Technology as part of the European Digital Art and
Science Network.

In Reverberadas (Reverberations), art and science go hand in hand in creative


compositions, reverberating off each other. They are tools used by society to
intervene in reality by making the inaccessible accessible—even if only partially, by
capturing and revealing some properties. The reverberated works are like dots in a
Join the Dots game, part of a vast picture and space for cooperations by different
artistic disciplines and scientific branches.
Reverberdas curated by: Fermín Serrano

María Ignacia Edwards (CL)


Encounters, 2016
This artwork is the product of shared
observation and experience, inspired by
astronomy, music, and mathematics. The
result of this gave rise to the works Mobile
Wind and String Instrument comprising a piano
as its resonance chamber and 11 swings as the
extension and projection of its key. The project
was realized during a EDASN residency project
(ESO Observatory, Chile, and Ars Electronica
Iñaki Gil ©FZC

Futurelab, Linz.)

María Ignacia Edwards (CL). The artist’s work has its origin in her efforts to be an active observer of the world,
investigating different phenomena and the relationship to human beings. Her work has been exhibited in Chile and
internationally. She received the “Art for Science” award from the National Commission for Scientific and Techno-
logical Research (CONICYT) in Santiago, Chile.

193
Óscar Sanmartín (ES)
Digital Composition 3, 2011

All works display features of the time they were


created. Technology or ideas from a certain
era are visible in their aesthetic or formal
aspects. This work, which clearly reveals
romantic aesthetics and appears to be a
traditional pencil drawing, is recreated with
digital tools and technology.

© The artist

Óscar Sanmartín (ES) is an illustrator and designer. His works include fields such as magazine and record covers,
theater set design, and films. He has participated in many exhibitions. www.oscarsanmartin.com

Edu Comelles (ES), Andrea Pazos (ES)


Constellation, 2016
Constellation is a generative audio-visual
installation inspired by and created using
countless sound files extracted from open
databases from different spatial agencies and
universities across the world, as well as
unrecognizable fragments of soundtracks,
Photo by Iñaki Gil ©FZC

effects, and iconic dialogues from


cinematographic science fiction.

Edu Comelles (ES) is a sound designer, musician, and curator. He is currently involved in several individual and
collective projects ranging from sound art, soundscapism, and experimental music. www.educomelles.com
Andrea Pazos (ES) studied Digital Art at Pompeu Fabra University. She is a creative artist currently working at the
Media Lab of Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. www.andreapazos.com

194
Varvara Guljajeva (EE), Mar Canet (ES)
Data Drops, 2015
Data Drops is a data sculpture project, which
addresses the issue of personal data collection
and its usage through a metaphor. The data
was obtained from a survey on how people
felt about their personal data being used by
third parties, designed by researcher Ramon
Sangüesa (www.thecityandyourdata.net). The

Photo by Iñaki Gil ©FZC


colors resulting from people´s emotional data,
collected in a previous survey, are visualized as
droplets on microscope slides. The droplets
move freely on the slides, chasing, merging,
and interacting with each other.

Mar Cannet (ES) and Varvara Guljajeva (EE) is an artist duo formed in 2009. Their work is often inspired by the
digital age and addresses social changes and the impact of the technological era. Varvara & Mar are also
fascinated by kinetics and participation, which are integral parts of their work. www.varvarag.info

Guillermo Casado (ES), Azucena Giganto (ES)


Deep Life, 2012
Life is a network of relationships of different
self-organized ecosystems that relate to each
other. We explore the similarities—at least on
the aesthetic level—between structures on
microscopic and macroscopic scales, and
Photo by Iñaki Gil ©FZC

observe how the network itself is a living entity


that mutates and reacts unpredictably.

Guillermo Casado (ES) is a physicist, coder, and digital artist. He specializes in interactive systems and new
media and is interested in researching links between different knowledge fields, building connections through
the alternate use of technology and how interactive technology can bring science closer to society in a creative
way. www.peripecio.com
Azucena Giganto (ES) is a graduate in Fine Arts from Universidad Complutense in Madrid and a multimedia
artist. Her main tool for investigation and expression is image in movement, particularly in digital media and new
technologies. She has her own design company that specializes in motion graphics and FX. www.azuzen.com

195
Jaime de los Ríos (ES)
5th Column, 2016
When the machines begin to write and paint,
contemporary art is facing an existential crisis.
Digital reproducibility capacity is already
unlimited, which brings many possibilities but
also many potential problems. 5th Column
is a completely arbitrary installation

Photo by Iñaki Gil ©FZC


that encourages reflection on the power
of machines.

Jaime de los Ríos (ES) is founder of the open laboratory of Art and Science ARTEK [Lab]. His work focuses
on the intersection of these disciplines and systemics science, especially regarding the mechanisms,
rhythms and natural patterns, and collective intelligence. arteklab.org

Metrysym, 2016
Jürgen Ropp (AT), Marta Pérez (ES)

Symmetry stands for balance, perfection and


beauty. Symmetric shapes and objects attract
each other, re-establishing the ideal
© Jürgen Ropp and Marta Pérez Campos

equilibrium. The ideal of symmetry is


consistently followed and investigated in
physics, which led to the development of
the antimatter concept. One of the main
questions in this project is: How would
gravity affect antimatter? Metrysym theorizes
about the idea that antimatter and visible
matter react differently to gravity.

Jürgen Ropp (AT) is currently in the Master´s program at the Interface Cultures department of the Art University
Linz (AT) and has a background in media technology and design. His artistic work is based on the intersection
between art and science with the purpose of communicating scientific research discoveries and the implied
issues to a broader audience. www.juergenropp.at
Marta Pérez Campos (ES) is a masters candidate at Interface Cultures, Art University Linz (AT) and is currently
carrying out research for her masters thesis at IAMAS: Institute of Advanced Media Arts and Sciences (JP).
With a background in Fine Arts, her main interest is on human communication and the interference that occurs
in our verbal exchanges. www.martapcampos.com

196
CEFCA—Centro de Estudios de Física
del Cosmos de Aragón (ES)
Images from CEFCA

Teruel, a little-known province in Aragon,


eastern Spain, is home to a center for research
in Astrophysics and Cosmology (CEFCA). This
young institution makes good use of the
Javalambre Auxiliary Telescope and its unique

Photo by Iñaki Gil. ©FZC


features, which attracts scientists from all over
the world to come and observe the night sky
at the Observatory.

CEFCA Foundation (ES) is an institution of the Government of Aragón, whose activities focus on the
technological development and operation of the Astrophysics Observatory of Javalambre (OAJ) and on its
scientific exploitation. The main research lines of CEFCA are Galaxy Evolution and Cosmology. www.cefca.es

Carlos Sicilia, Luis Martín, Alejandro Gállego, Luis Frisón (ES)


Open Curiosity, 2016

Open Curiosity is an open source ExoMars


rover (1:5 scale) that facilitates affordable
space exploration for all. Based on the NASA
Curiosity Rover, it uses Arduino. Data gathered
(temperature, pressure, radiation, distance,
wheel position, arm position) is available on
the internet for educational, scientific, or other
purposes. Sensors detect obstacles to avoid
collisions and it has a HD video camera.
Photo by Iñaki Gil. ©FZC

Carlos Sicilia (ES), Luis Martín (ES), Alejandro Gállego (ES), and Luis Frisón (ES),
are four engineer friends who enjoy DIY technologies. Open Curiosity is their latest creation.

197
Afroditi Psarra (GR), Cécile Lapoire (FR)
Cosmic Bitcasting, 2016

Cosmic Bitcasting is an open-source, wearable


detector of secondary muons generated by
cosmic rays hitting the Earth’s atmosphere that
penetrate the human body by triggering a
series of embedded actuators (light, sound
and vibration). Cosmic Bitcasting emerges
from the idea of connecting the human body
with the universe by creating a wearable

Photo by Iñaki Gil. ©FZC


interface that can provide sensory feedback
on the invisible cosmic radiation that passes
through us.

Afroditi Psarra (GR) is a multidisciplinary artist working with e-textiles, DIY electronics, and sound. Her artistic
interest focuses on concepts such as the body as an interface, contemporary handicrafts and folk tradition, pop
iconography, retrofuturistic aesthetics, and the role of women in contemporary culture. www.afroditipsarra.com
Cécile Lapoire (FR) is a data scientist and research scientist who has worked at CERN (The European
Organization for Nuclear Research) in Geneva for 4 years. She holds a PhD in experimental particle physics
from the University of Marseille and has worked on the ATLAS detector, a general-purpose detector at the
Large Hadron Collider (LHC). She is currently working as a data scientist at Infinite Analytics, a startup based
in Boston, US.

Santiago Latorre (ES)


E6, 2011
E6 is a music piece based on four chords that
are repeated for six minutes. In the first part,
the chords are executed by synthetic sounds,
generated from human DNA molecules thanks
to the sound synthesizer developed by the
artist. E6 uses the infrared spectrum of the
basic molecules that make up DNA as source
Photo by Iñaki Gil. ©FZC

of information. As the piece evolves, the


synthetic sounds open and transform as they
remain restricted to the same harmonic cycle.
A big fake orchestra emerges.

Santiago Latorre (ES) uses his voice, saxophone, and electronics to break the gravity, make you float, and take
you on a trip around the Cosmos. After a few years composing music for dance, theater, and videoart he
released Órbita. This album took him on tour in the USA, Japan, and China, and to festivals like Sónar or LEM.
www.santiagolatorre.com

198
Cycle II: BIOESTETICA
Exhibition Postnature
21.09.2017 – 13.01.2018

BIOESTETICA is the second project of Zaragoza City


of Knowledge Foundation within the program of
the European Digital Art and Science Network. It is an
ambitious project that takes the form of an expanded
exhibition, made up of artistic residencies, workshops,
conferences, exhibitions, and films, on the impact of
biotechnology on contemporary artistic imaginary.
The term “post-nature” reminds us that nature is no longer what it was, and that we
urgently need to find spaces, ideas, and practices for critical thinking. What role do
science and technology play in redefining life in the 21st century? What ethical and
aesthetic implications emerge? What influence do humans have in the
Anthropocene period? Will a post-anthropocentric paradigm be able to change
this? What role can creative action play in this scenario? There are many
heterogeneous artistic practices, sometimes generically referred to as “bioart”,
keeping pace with biotechnological transformation. How can artistic practice
express bioknowledge? What problems and potentials arise from the multiple
interactions possible between art, science and technology?
Curated by: Daniel López del Rincón
Acknowledgements: Contemporary Art Museum of Barcelona (MACBA), Goya Museum, Zaragoza;
Institute for Biocomputation and Physics of Complex Systems (BIFI), Science Museum University
of Zaragoza; University of Barcelona, CRAI Biology Library; Sorigué Foundation, Lleida;
US Consulate, Barcelona.

Salvador Dalí (ES)


Jacob’s Ladder, 1975
Dalí’s Deoxyribonucleic Acid and Jacob’s
Ladder, or simply Jacob’s Ladder (1975), is a
surrealistic depiction of DNA structure, with
angels ascending and descending the ladder.
The bond between genetics and religiosity is
© Barcelona University . CRAI Biology Library

clear and DNA forms a link between the divine


and the human.

Salvador Dali (ES) was an important surrealist artist. He


was fascinated by science and was closely acquainted
with prominent scientists and theories. https://www.
salvador-dali.org/es

199
Francisco de Zurbarán or Juan Fernández (ES)
Bodegón (Still Life), 1625–1629
Light box reproduction

The Still Life with a Vase and Flowers, also with


a pewter plate with peaches, two books, a cup
with water, roses and a rosary is a Spanish still

© Goya Museum, Zaragoza


life from the start of the Baroque period,
possibly by either Francisco de Zurbarán
during his early period in Llerena, 1625, or by
the enigmatic still life painter Juan Fernández,
known as “el labrador.”

Francisco Zurbarán (ES) Fuente de Cantos (Badajoz) 1598 – Madrid in 1664.


Juan Fernández (ES), “el labrador“ (“the farmer”) was an enigmatic, Spanish Baroque painter,
active between 1629 and 1636, who specialized in still life painting.

Carlos de Haes (BEL/ES)


Jinete y caballo bebiendo agua de un
río en los alrededores de Madrid
(Rider and horse drinking water from a
river in the surroundings of Madrid), 1860
Light box reproduction

Landscape of the surroundings of Madrid


© Goya Museum, Zaragoza

originally painted with oil on canvas.

Carlos de Haes, Brussels 1828 – Madrid 1898, introduced landscape painting to Spain.

200
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes (ES)
Asta su abuelo, 1799
(And So Was His Grandfather)
Light box reproduction

This print of an ass sitting at a low table with


an open book is a pointed criticism of Manuel
de Godoy, an extremely powerful and
much-hated man in Spain.

Francisco de Goya (ES). Fuendetodos,

© Goya Museum, Zaragoza


Zaragoza 1746 – Bordeaux 1828.
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes was a universal
Aragonese and Spanish painter.

Marina Nuñez (ES)


Demasiado mundo, 2010
(Too Much World)
Single channel video, 1’ 6”

In the video projections, some closed doors


gradually open up to show us the world
outside .... They then close with a bang, rudely
awakening us and bringing us back to reality ...
Desolate landscapes, crumbling ruins, the
remnants of buildings in which we can see
human remains, chimeras, that compose
enigmatic scenes ... Against this apparently
immobile backdrop we are trapped by an
explosion. One being arises from another
being, a new life immediately springs forth.
Mutant heads with non-controlled, excessive
growth are joined together and trapped. Taken
from Alicia Vela, “Chimeras”. In Demasiado
© The artist

Mundo, exhibition catalogue (2010). Valencia


(Spain): Centre del Carmen, p. 213.

Marina Nuñez (ES) received her degree in fine art from the University of Salamanca
and is currently a professor at the Faculty of Fine Art of Pontevedra at the University of Vigo.
http://www.marinanunez.net

201
Marco Brambilla (IT)
Civilization [Megaplex], 2008
Single channel video, 3' 22''

Originally conceived as a single piece, during


his work Marco Brambilla got the idea for two
further works, Evolution, 2010, and Creation,
2012, which would become a big mosaic of our
time. The video shows micro-histories of

© Sorigué Foundation
diverse aspects such as Nazism, beauty
contests, Michael Jackson, and space shuttles
launchings, at the same time placing them in a
wider context—the human condition itself,
Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise.

Marco Brambilla (IT) is a visual and an installation artist, based in New York and Berlin. He is primarily
known for his elaborate re-contextualizations of imagery, often employing new technologies in his work.

Empar Buxeda (ES)


El mutante ggi-1, 2008-2017
El genoma del gusano incierto
Mutant ggi-1, 2008-2017
The Genome of the Uncertain Worm
Installation

The project Mutant ggi-1 (the genome of the


uncertain worm) is based on the artist’s genetic
transformation of a C. elegans worm,
frequently used in biological lab research,
© The artist

rendering it completely useless for any further


lab research. The 2017 residency in Etopia
reproduces this genetic transformation of a
live and alive specimen artwork.

Empar Buxeda (ES) is a fine art graduate and has a masters in Artistic Productions and Research from
the University of Barcelona. 2007 – 2012 she carried out intense artistic research in biology laboratory
practices applied to art. www.emparbuxeda.com

202
Regina Galindo (GT)
Recorte por la línea
(Cut by the Line), 2005
Video performance with the
participation of Dr. Billy Spence

The original performance took place in


Caracas, with Dr. Billy Spence, the best plastic
surgeon in Venezuela. The doctor is marking
all the areas on Regina José Galindo’s body
that need to be altered in order to create the
perfect body according to existing aesthetic
codes. The video documents the performance
and shows how patriarchal codes literally
rewrite the women’s body using medical
science (aesthetic surgery) as a tool for this
purpose.

Regina Galindo (GT) is a visual artist based


in Guatemala. Her art practices are connected
with performance art where she explores universal
ethical implications of social injustices linked

© The artist
with racial discriminations, gender, and other
abuse located in the unequal power relations
power in modern societies.
www.reginajosegalindo.com

Joana Moll (ES)


CO2GLE, 2015
DEFOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOREST, 2016
net-art

Hardly anybody recalls that the Internet is


made up of interconnected physical
infrastructures that consume natural
resources. CO2GLE is a real-time, net-based
installation that displays the amount of CO2
emitted each second by global visits to
google.com.
DEFOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOREST
is a net-based piece that shows the number of
trees needed to absorb the amount of CO2
generated by global visits to google.com every
second.
© The artist

[Excerpt from the website of the artist].


http://www.janavirgin.com/CO2/
http://www.janavirgin.com/CO2/DE-
FOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOREST.html

Joana Moll (ES) is an artist and a researcher whose work critically explores the way post-capitalist narratives
affect the alphabetization of machines, humans, and ecosystems. Her main research topics include Internet
materiality, surveillance, online tracking, critical interfaces, and language. janavirgin.com/

203
Brandon Ballengée (US)
Zaragoza Eco Actions, 2017
Texts, video documentation, photography, maps

Zaragoza Eco Actions is a transdisciplinary


bioart project involving the public that
analyses the health of local Zaragoza
ecosystems by investigating amphibian
malformation and disease levels. Local frogs
are studied on “Eco-Actions,” participatory
field trips involving the public, and everything
is documented to encourage Zaragoza
residents to learn more about their local

© Feldman Gallery, NY
post-natural ecosystems.

Brandon Ballengée (US). Visual artist, biologist and environmental educator based in Louisiana. Ballengée
creates transdisciplinary artworks inspired by his ecological field and laboratory research. Since 1996, a central
research focus has been the occurrence of developmental deformities and population decline among
amphibians.
brandonballengee.com

Joaquín Fargas (AR)


Proyecto bioesfera
Biosphere Project
Ecosystem installations

The Biosphere Project consists of natural


ecosystems isolated inside sealed containers
that only allow the external influence of heat
and light. These systems, like our planet,
depend on light as a source of energy for the
development and continued existence of the
© The artist

life cycles that take place inside of them.

Joaquín Fargas (AR) integrates the arts, science and technology in his artistic production. He is professor
of Art and Technology at Maimonides University, where he founded the Bioart Lab and became its director.
www.joaquinfargas.com

204
Quimera Rosa (ES)
Transplant: Connecting Mycorrhiza
with Internet, 2017

Texts, documents, videos, graphics, pictures,


and code, form this mixed media biotech
installation that features the found remains of
a vanished biohacker team in 2024 when the
resources of planet Earth have been exploited.
One part of the installation has soil and
mycorrhiza connected to electronic sensors
whose activity is altered by the audience

© The artists
presence.

Quimera Rosa (Pink Chimera) (ES) is an experimentation and research lab on identities, body and
technology. They adopt Donna Haraway’s definition of the Cyborg: “chimeras, theorized and fabricated
hybrids of machine and organism.” The group’s installations and performances are based on the
deconstruction of sex and gender identities and on body/machine/environment interaction.
www.quimerarosa.net

Allison Kudla (US)


Growth & Decay, 2017
Photography

This is a set of two photographic prints


depicting tiles from the project Growth
Pattern. This diptych shows the tiles in the
initial state with lush, green leaves that have
recently been cut into a botanical abstraction
and in the final state, with leaves that have
begun to decay, with mold and bacteria.
Growth Pattern creates a generative image
and time-lapse animation.

Allison Kudla (US) has been working at the Institute


for Systems Biology since 2012. Before that, she was
an artist-in-residence and faculty member at the
Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology in
Bangalore, India. Her PhD focused on creating art
for the purpose of looking at the universe as an
© The artist

operating system. www.allisonx.com

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Christa Sommerer (AT),
Laurent Mignonneau (FR/AT)
Portrait on the Fly, 2016
Interactive video installation

This interactive installation consists of a


monitor that shows a swarm of a few thousand
flies. When a person positions himself in front
of the monitor, the insects build up the
contour of the person, which changes as the
person moves, reflecting transience and
impermanence.

© The artists
Christa Sommerer (AT), Laurent Mignonneau (FR/AT). This artist duo is a pioneer in the research and
development of systems of artificial and interactive life applied to the world of art. Currently, they are professors
of Interface Culture at the University of Art and Design, Linz (AT), and at IAMAS in Gifu (JP). www.interface.ufg.at

Perejaume (ES)
Pintura d’Olot que ha tornat la seva imatge a Olot, 1993
(Painting of Olot which has given Olot its image back)
Object, canvas, wood

This return of images to their places of origin has been a recurring theme in the
work of Perejaume. The constancy of this obstinacy that the images go backwards
and return to the world they come from has been translated into the claim that the
artist has expressed many times in literary terms. (trans. of Martí Peran, ”Tractat
sobre les formes de recular i trobar el lloc”, 2011)

Perejaume (ES) began his artistic career in the late seventies, and became associated with
avant-garde movements such as Dada, Surrealism, and Conceptual art, and also to Romanticism
and nineteenth-century Catalan landscape painting.

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Joan Fontcuberta (ES), Pere Formiguera (ES)
Fauna / Pirofagus Catalanae, 1989
Photography

Fauna is a large-format installation of multiple elements around the figure of a


forgotten scientist and his discoveries in the animal world. The starting point is the
supposed discovery by two photographers of the lost archives of the German
zoologist Peter Ameisenhaufen, who catalogued a series of rare animals, such as
Pirofagus Catalanae, a dragon found in Sicily, abandoned by the Catalan invaders in
the sixteenth century, that swallowed its own flame after ejecting it.

Joan Fontcuberta (ES) is one of the most internationally renowned Catalan photographers.
www.fontcuberta.com
Pere Formiguera (ES) is a photographer, writer, and curator. One of the key personalities to
understand photography in Spain in the last decades.

Heather Dewey-Hagborg (US)


Stranger Visions, 2012–13
3D printing face reproductions

In Stranger Visions I collected hairs, chewed


up gum, and cigarette butts from the streets,
public bathrooms, and waiting rooms of New
York City. I extracted DNA from them and
analyzed it to computationally generate 3D
printed lifesize full color portraits representing
what those individuals might look like, based
on genomic research. (Excerpt from Stranger
Visions by Heather Dewey Hagborg)
© The artist

Heather Dewey-Hagborg (US) is a transdisciplinary artist and educator who is interested in art as
research and critical practice. deweyhagborg.com/projects/stranger-visions

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GV Art London

208
“GV Art in the past has courted controversy Museum, and the University of Western
with exhibitions featuring slices of human Australia). These have resulted in a number of
brain. Even so, there is never the sense that powerful exhibitions including Of the Flesh,
the gallery’s exhibitions are involved in Brainstorm, Experiments, Dendritic Forms,
voyeurism or shock tactics.” Relics of the Mind, +Art & Science, Sense of
TREBUCHET, Issue 1, 2017. Taste, Coming of Age, Trauma, Polymath, and
Graphite while simultaneously fostering a
coordinated approach towards the exhibition,
GV Art London is the London hub for art and and the cataloguing and preservation of these
science discourse, fostering collaborations new works.
through a program of curated exhibitions & GV Art strives to create new perspectives
events. Its core mission is to pave the way whether that means continuing the ethical
for new esthetic sensibilities and catalyze debate around the use of human remains for
the exchange of ideas between these the production of art (made possible GV Art’s
intersections. privilege of holding a Human Tissue Authority
Over ten years GV Art has curated and Licence for Public Display and Storage) or
produced more than fifty exhibitions and through displaying graphene within a new
over a hundred events working within these cultural context to explore and illustrate
intellectual parameters and encouraging graphite’s remarkable history and materiality.
interdisciplinary practice and creative New debates on the Anthropocene are
entanglements. Such exhibitions place highlighted in works by Anaïs Tondeur while
great emphasis on public education and existing discussions on mental health are
engagement, inviting the public and artistic given fresh insights with challenging new
and scientific communities to initiate forums for neuroscientists and industry
conversations on shifting ethical guidelines professionals. Collectively, they reiterate the
for future collaborations and experimentation. need to look more deeply at our understand-
Critical to GV Art’s success are the strong ing of the human condition.
strategic partnerships enjoyed with many GV Art also represents the estates of numer-
major institutions (Human Tissue Authority, ous artists at the forefront of the art+ science
Newcastle University, University of discourse including the Franciszka & Stefan
Westminster, University of the Arts London, Themerson Estate. It strives to ensure their
Central Saint Martins, Kings College London, ideas retain their relevance in contemporary
Imperial College London, Manchester discourse. It works with institutions such
University, University College London, Universi- as the Tate and V&A to place artworks in
ty of Oxford, Goldsmiths University of London, collections so that future generations
Portsmouth University, Middlesex University, understand the meaningful interdisciplinary
London Metropolitan University, Queen Mary collaborations that shape the development of
University of London, Barts Pathology art & technology past, present, and future.
www.gvart.co.uk

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#postARTandSCIENCE
A one-day symposium
22.09.2017

Over the last 30 years art+science has grown set up by Polish avant-garde artists, the
from a niche interest to a legitimate field of Themersons, provide one possible model that
inquiry and experimentation, producing many could be adapted and updated for the 21st
exciting projects, interdisciplinary century? Could this be a way of inventing a
collaborations, and lively debates across #postARTandSCIENCE community? Should
various academic and artistic institutions. At #postARTandSCIENCE be post-research
the same time, concerns have been raised that foundation, post-university, and post-arts
aesthetically engaging art is all too frequently festival too?
used to illuminate a scientific idea and, in this
way, help scientists communicate with a wider Funding
audience. Even some of the more collaborative What possible avenues for support are
projects between artists and sciences maintain available for a more experimental approach to
the distinction between the two fields, which art+science that does not merely aim to use
temporarily come together in various funded the relatively large amounts of funding that are
projects. So, is it time to move on from available to science in order to support art,
art+science? with the latter then being required to fulfill its
#postARTandSCIENCE has as its main theme part of the bargain by acting in the service of
thinking beyond art+science—especially in the the former? What are the important differences
sense in which this pairing is conventionally between the ways art and science are funded,
understood. Are we satisfied with the way and the wider rationales as to why they are
art+science has operated to date, and, if not, being practiced in the first place? When do
what should come after it? Can art change they converge and when do they diverge? Are
what we understand by science? Can science there agencies, companies and funding bodies
itself be considered a form of art? Should the that can support #postARTandSCIENCE?
relation be extended to take in other methods Are there any successful examples of this
and approaches, such as those associated happening already?
with engineering, geography, anthropology,
literature, philosophy, or media? Or does The human subject
#postARTandSCIENCE call for an a-disciplinary It seems that too often the “art+science”
approach? relationship has consisted of art curators
and critics engaging posthumanist and
Within that rubric, a number of questions are anti-humanist art and science, i.e. art and
raised by this symposium, focusing on three science that challenges the primacy of the
key themes: human as the main agent and driving force
of the world, whether it concerns Artificial
Institution Intelligence and Artificial Life, cognition,
To date, art+science has been associated robotics, genomics, or the Anthropocene—in
largely with the research foundation (e.g. a rather humanist way. Can we imagine a
Wellcome), the research center (e.g. CERN), posthumanist approach to art and science?
the university, and the arts festival (ISEA, Ars What forms might that take? What media
Electronica). To what extent are we ready to would it use to present its outcomes? And
move beyond such traditional institutional what kinds of ethical and political questions
forms? For example, does the Common Room would be raised by this shift towards a more
posthuman art+science?

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#postARTandSCIENCE
one-day symposium
Wellcome Collection auditorium
22.09.2017

Curated by GV Art London

Speakers:

Martin Kemp, Emeritus Professor of the History Stelarc, Performance artist and Distinguished
of Art, Trinity College, Oxford Research Fellow, School of Design and Art,
Curtin University
Joanna Zylinska, Professor of New Media and
Communications, Goldsmiths, University of Nina Sellars, Artist in Residence, SymbioticA,
London The University of Western Australia, funded by
the Australia Council for the Arts
Gary Hall, Professor of Media and Performing
Arts, Coventry University Euan Lawson, Partner at Simkins LLP
Moderated by Luke Robert Mason,
William Latham, Computing Department
Director of Virtual Futures
Goldsmiths, University of London

211
Kapelica Gallery
Kersnikova Institute
Galerija Kapelica
Zavod Kersnikova
Ljubljana, Slovenia

212
Kersnikova Institute provides the framework for Pod okriljem Zavoda Kersnikova delujejo
Kapelica Gallery and two laboratories that deal Galerija Kapelica in laboratorija za umetniško
with artistic research, development, and raziskovanje, razvoj in izobraževanje.
education. The first laboratory, BioTehna, is a Laboratorij BioTehna je platforma za
platform for artistic research of living systems umetniško raziskovanje živih sistemov
(wet lab) in which the artists are joined by (wet lab), v katerem umetniki skupaj z
scientists and engineers and together they znanstveniki in inženirji razvijajo svoje
develop projects which will later be presented in projekte, ki jih kasneje predstavljajo v Galeriji
the Kapelica Gallery. Similar activities also take Kapelica. Podobne dejavnosti potekajo tudi
place in the second laboratory, Rampa (hacker v laboratoriju Rampa (hacker space), kjer
space), where new artistic projects emerge as a ob raziskovanju nastajajo novi umetniški
result of the research carried out there. The two projekti. Oba laboratorija skupaj povezuje
laboratories also share intense educational tudi intenzivna izobraževalna dejavnost,
activities, where children, youth, and the expert prek katere otroke, mladostnike in strokovno
public can become inspired by artists and javnost navdihujejo umetniki in znanstveniki,
scientists who use the laboratory infrastructure ki sicer uporabljajo laboratorijsko
for their projects. infrastrukturo za svoje projekte.
Since 1995 Kapelica Gallery has been producing Že od leta 1995 se v Galeriji Kapelica
and presenting artistic projects that address predstavljajo umetniški projekti, ki
contemporary technological society. We mostly tematizirajo sodobno tehnologizirano
investigate the influence of high technologies družbo. Predvsem gre tu za raziskovanje
that became ubiquitous with the ever greater vpliva visokih tehnologij, ki so z večjo
accessibility to computers and the internet. dostopnostjo računalnikov in interneta
Telecommunication, automation, robotics, postale vseprisotne. Telekomunikacije,
internet, social networks, biotechnology, and avtomatika, robotika, internet, družbena
aerospace are changing the relationships within omrežja, biotehnologija, vesoljske
contemporary society so radically that certain tehnologije ipd. razmerja v sodobni družbi
new social phenomena can only be reached tako radikalno spreminjajo, da se je mogoče
through artistic sensibility. However, in order nekaterih novih družbenih fenomenov
for artists to be able to consistently address dotakniti le skozi umetniško senzibilnost.
the phenomena that have initiated their meta- Toda da bi umetniki lahko dosledno
physical interest, they have to understand the tematizirali fenomen, ki je pognal njihov
logic behind the technological intervention that metafizični interes, morajo razumeti logiko
led to this. For this reason, artists join forces tehnološke intervencije, ki je do tega
with engineers and scientists who help them pripeljala. Zato se umetniki povezujejo z
understand and use the technologies, materials, inženirji in znanstveniki, ki jim pomagajo pri
and scientific processes with which they create razumevanju in rabi tehnologij, materialov
their works of art. ali znanstvenih postopkov, s katerimi na
umetniški način izvedejo svoje delo.

213
In most cases artists cooperate with scientists V večini primerov umetnice in umetniki
and engineers they know from their school or sodelujejo z znanstveniki in inženirji, ki jih
neighborhood, a kind of cooperation that goes poznajo še iz srednje šole ali iz svojega
far beyond the usual collaboration between bivalnega okoliša, saj ta sodelovanja
experts. The producers from Kersnikova Institute presegajo golo strokovno razmerje. Običajno
often supervise the cooperation between the v okviru produkcije umetniškega projekta za
artists and the scientists. By doing this, they sodelovanje med umetniki in znanstveniki
ensure that the communication, organization, poskrbijo producenti v Zavodu Kersnikova,
and logistics between the participants are ki prevzamejo komunikacijo, organizacijo in
effective, which in turn contributes to the logistiko med deležniki ter s tem izdatno
success of the project. The project thus runs pripomorejo k uspešnosti projekta. V takih
more smoothly and the artists and scientists can primerih je delo ustvarjalcev projekta veliko
focus on the final outcome, while at the same bolj tekoče in osredotočeno na končni
time forming more sustainable connections izdelek, hkrati pa vzpostavljanje povezav
between the gallery and institutes (including med galerijo in inštituti (tudi univerzami in
universities and companies) in which scientists podjetji), na katerih delajo znanstveniki in
and engineers work. Through this they establish inženirji, omogoča bolj trajnostna
long-term connections, which facilitate sodelovanja, ki bistveno olajšajo sodelovanje
cooperation in future projects. With this in mind tudi pri nadaljnjih projektih. S tem namenom
we at Kersnikova Institute established excellent smo v Zavodu Kersnikova vzpostavili odlične,
yet informal connections with the Institute of toda še vedno neformalne povezave z
Biochemistry and the Institute of Cell Biology at Inštitutom za biokemijo in Inštitutom za
the University of Ljubljana, the central national biologijo celice na Univerzi v Ljubljani,
scientific Institute Jožef Stefan (Department z osrednjim nacionalnim znanstvenim
for Robotics and Artificial Intelligence), the Inštitutom Jožef Stefan (Oddelek za robotiko
Biotechnical Faculty and the Institute of in umetno inteligenco), Biotehniško fakulteto
Chemistry, the Slovenian Centre of Excellence in Kemijskim inštitutom, Centrom odličnosti
for Space Sciences and Technologies Vesolje-SI in drugimi.
(Space-SI), and others.

214
The invitations extended to scientists to Taktično so pri senzibiliziranju, povezovanju
participate in various debate panels which take in kasneje sodelovanju pomagali angažmaji
place in the form of a science café, have helped znanstvenikov, ki smo jih povabili na različne
sensitize them and establish connections that tematske pogovore v obliki znanstvene
lead to later cooperation. Through these events kavarne. Ob teh priložnostih so se seznanili
they have learnt more about the hybrid activities z dejavnostmi na Zavodu Kersnikova in se
that take place at Kersnikova Institute, and all vsi navdušili za sodelovanje pri umetniških
have shown great enthusiasm for cooperating projektih, ki so sledili in pri katerih smo bili
in following art projects. During this process we priča izjemno zanimivim socialnim in
have witnessed extremely interesting social and strokovnim dinamikam, ki so inspirirale vse
expert dynamics that have inspired everybody udeležene v in ob projektih. Produktivnost
involved in the project. The productivity of sodelovanja med umetniki in znanstveniki
artists and scientists has almost become a je takorekoč že splošni meme, toda kljub
general meme, but regardless of the long-term dolgoletnim prizadevanjem sodelovanja
endeavors, we have so far not managed to med umetniškimi in znanstvenimi
formalize the cooperation between art and inštitucijami še vedno nismo uspeli
science institutions to the extent that creative formalizirati do te mere, da bi bila
partnerships are systematically recognized and kreativna partnerstva sistematično priznana
included in the scientific research environment. in vgrajena v znanstvenoraziskovalno
Our endeavors to establish transdisciplinary okolje. Zato naša prizadevanja za ustvarjanje
connections also apply to the institutionalized transdisciplinarnih povezav merijo tudi na
level, for we hope that the political decision inštitucionalno raven, saj si prizadevamo, da
makers in charge of funding will have sufficient bi resorni politični odločevalci zmogli toliko
vision to enable systematic cooperation vizionarskosti, da bi omogočili sistematično
between artists and researchers, and not prepletanje ustvarjalcev in raziskovalcev, ki
discriminate against them financially. Only equal ne bi bili finančno diskriminirani. Le pod
conditions will guarantee sustainable innovate takimi enakopravnimi pogoji je mogoče
dynamics, for innovation and creativity cannot pričakovati vzdržno inovacijsko dinamiko,
be ordered on command. Innovation and saj inoviranja in kreativnosti ni mogoče
creativity can emerge only if the right conditions enostavno naročiti s pritiskom na gumb.
and circumstances are established. Da bi inovacije in kreativnost lahko vzniknili,
Text: Jurij Krpan moramo zanje ustvariti primerne pogoje
in okoliščine.

 REPUBLIC OF SLOVENIA
MINISTRY OF CULTURE

215
Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova Institute
Activities

Exhibitions Workshops
(BioTehna, Ljubljana)
Saša Spačal, Slavko Glamočanin: Syncness
Earth Without Humans I
Kapelica Gallery, Ljubljana
12.01. – 05.02.2016 Kristijan Tkalec: The Beginning of Life on Earth
10.06.2016
Earth Without Humans I Angelo Vermeulen: Vertical Farming: Building a
Multispecies Biological Life Support System
Gilberto Esparza: Autophotosynthetic Plants
11.06. –12.6.2016
Vžigalica Gallery, Ljubljana
16.05. –18.06.2016
Earth Without Humans II
Adam W. Brown: ReBioGeneSys – Björn Huwe: Cultivating Extremophile in the Lab
Origins of Life 07.06. – 08.06.2017
Kapelica Gallery, Ljubljana
Saša Spačal, Mirjan Švagelj: Soil Tasting
09.06. – 15.07.2016
13.06.2017
Andy Gracie: Drosophila Titanus Kristijan Tkalec: Mars Exploratory
Rampa Lab, Ljubljana 03.06. – 17.06.2017
09.06. – 15.07.2016
Aljoša Abrahamsberg: The Game has Symposium
Begun in Secret (Kapelica Gallery, Ljubljana)
Sonoretum, Ljubljana
09.06. – 15.07.2016 Earth Without Humans I , 10.06.2016
Michael Sterzik/European Southern Observatory
Nelo Akamatsu: Chijikinkutsu
(ESO): The Quest for a Second Earth
Kapelica Gallery, Ljubljana
Adam W. Brown: ReBioGeneSys and the
01.09. – 29.09.2016
Origins of Life
Ralf Baecker: Interface I Andy Gracie: Terrestrial Post-Terrestrialism:
Kresija Gallery, Ljubljana Beyond Post-Nature
22.03. – 16.04.2017 Bernard Foing/European Space Agency (ESA):
Moon Village
Earth Without Humans II Olga Kutepova/Roskozmos: Biological Units of
Danny Bazo, Marko Peljhan, Karl Yerkes: Life Support Systems for Space Stations
Somnium Earth Without Humans I I, 09.06.2017
Kapelica Gallery, Ljubljana
Christophe Lasseur /European Space Agency
08.06. – 30.06.2017
(ESA): Man on Mars, the Perfect Example of
Katarina Petrović: Cosmologicus Circular Economy
Rampa Lab, Ljubljana Björn Huwe/University of Potsdam:
08.06. – 30.06.2017 BIOMEX – BIOlogy and Mars EXperiment
Benjamin Pothier: The Driest Desert on Earth:
Brane Zorman: ElektroMagnetikSpektrum
Extreme Arts and Astronaut Analog Trainings
Sonoretum, Ljubljana
Barbara Imhof/Liquifer Systems Group: Getting
08.06. – 30.06.2017
There. Being There. Staying There. Mars.
Green Wall: Plant—Machine Cohabitation Marko Peljhan/Projekt Atol, UCSB: Transhumanist
BioTehna, Ljubljana Projections
08.06. – 30.06.2017 Jon Jenkins/NASA: Chasing Exoplanets

216
Earth Without Humans I
International symposium, exhibitions and workshops
09.06. – 15.07.2016

In his critical essay “Future City” 1, Fredric However, these environments, which are
Jameson adapted J. G. Ballard’s conservative situated in actual or simulated radical
belief that “the end of capitalism is the end conditions, offer an exceptional opportunity
of the world” into “it is nowadays easier to for scientists and technology experts as well
imagine the destruction of the earth and as decision-makers and investors, in addition
nature than to imagine the end of late to artists and activists, not to stray into the
capitalism.” This belief still successfully realms of unreflective techno-fascination, but
serves the critics of the capitalist production rather to rethink the starting points that we
system today and almost every criticism of are living here and now. Neo-Luddism surely
ecological indifference reminds us of James- does not provide the solutions that would
on’s observation that so vividly encapsulates return humans into the aforementioned
the self-destructive inertia of late-capitalist equation. This is why, in the tradition of
values. tactical media where establishing technologi-
cal literacy among the public is intended for
Ballard’s science-fiction dystopias and the reflective use of technology, we propose
modern criticisms of the capitalist system in the inclusive co-creation of scenarios in
the spirit of the latest scientific discoveries which creative people, by mastering technol-
and technological capabilities are being ogies, create personified and customized
revised in the above-mentioned equation. It applications for people, whereby the focus in
is much easier to picture a solution by taking essence shifts from profit to sustainability.
Earth out of the equation and instead insert-
ing another extra-terrestrial place, on which Ballard’s or Franklin’s or, if you please,
nature is yet to be created with the help of Jameson’s formula for the possible end of the
science and modern technology. For a world, presupposed an unspoken need for a
biosphere to be inhabitable, it must first be fundamentally altered understanding of the
populated by plants and animals, which will production system whereby humans would
create a breathable atmosphere to support nevertheless not destroy life on this planet. In
humans, without requiring exoskeletons for relation to the top scientists who create at
survival. These habitats inhabited by the limits of what is possible and in doing so
machines, plants, and animals are conceptual open up new imaginary expanses, and, with
evidence that upgrade science fiction to a some artists who are capable of translating
real scientific and technological paradise. these new dimensions into scenarios of the
Within them, machines and designed nature future, we held the event Earth Without
can self-sufficiently exist independently of Humans. Through a series of exhibitions and
humans. In the various versions on space a full-day conference, we dedicated our-
ships, planets, and moons, as well as on Earth selves to the fragile emergence of life that
itself, hi-tech environments appear to be the evolutionary theory and astrobiology spread
ultimate realization of capitalist bio-policies: out in front of us in post-humanist possibili-
here there is no more room for people to ties. We invited scientists from the European
rebel, go bad, eat, and grow old. Space Agency, the European Southern

217
Observatory, and the Russian Roscosmos to Partners: European Digital Art and Science Network,
KSEVT – Cultural Centre of European Space
participate in the conference, which was
Technologies
complemented by the exceptional artistic Supported by: Creative Europe program of the
contributions of Gilberto Esparza, Adam W. European Union, Ministry of Culture of the Republic
Brown, Andy Gracie, and Angelo Vermeulen. of Slovenia and Municipality of Ljubljana – Department
for Culture
Together we turned the spotlight on forms of
life that are still unknown to us. Curators / Kapelica Gallery: Jurij Krpan, Sandra Sajovic
Expert support: Miha Turšič
Text: Jurij Krpan Production and PR: Jana Putrle Srdić
Light design and technical support: Jure Sajovic
BioTehna & Rampa: Simon Gmajner, Kristijan Tkalec,
Maja Sande, Tajša Perović

1 Fredric Jameson: “Future city” (New Left Review, 2003). In his work Jameson writes, “Someone once said that
it is easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism.” And by this “someone” he is
referring to the text that “militant Marxist” Bruce Franklin conceptualised and criticised in his essay “What Are
We To Make Of Ballard’s Apocalypse.” (http://qlipoth.blogspot.si/2009/11/easier-to-imagine-end-of-world.html)

Miha Fras
Andy Gracie (UK/ES)
Drosophila Titanus
Drosophila Titanus is a long-term project
which, through a process of experimentation
and artificial selection, aims to breed a species
of Drosophila that would theoretically be
capable of living on Saturn’s largest moon,
Titan. The project adheres to a scientific
methodology while endeavoring to extract
artistic metaphor, poetry, and ambiguity from
apparent creative restrictions. The work
embraces interwoven narratives and concepts
of species, artificially created organisms, and
space travel, alongside darker issues such as
biological perfection, social Darwinism and
eugenics. Beyond the exploration of biological
and evolutionary issues the project engages
with biosemiotics in questioning the nature of
reality and organic perception of environ-
Miha Fras

mental sensory signals.


hostprods.net/projects/quest-for-drosophila-titanus

Andy Gracie (UK/ES) is an interdisciplinary artist whose work has involved studies and reactions to the science
of astrobiology and notions of the origins of life coupled with a re-examination of its boundaries. He employs
scientific theory and practice to question our relationships with environment and the future while simultaneously
bringing into focus the very relationship between art and science. Gracie received an Honorary Mention in
Hybrid Art at the Prix Ars Electronica 2015 and his work has been shown internationally. hostprods.net

218
Gilberto Esparza (MX)
Plantas Autofotosintéticas
(Autophotosynthetic Plants)

The Autophotosynthetic Plants installation manages to create a symbiotic state between the
bacteria, the plants, and the electronics that monitor the chemical and biological processes, so
that the plants and animals are capable of survival in a hostile environment. Inspired by
catastrophically polluted rivers that serve only as conduits for sewage in the most industrial and
overpopulated areas, the artist created a hybrid infrastructure in which waste-digesting bacteria
power fuel cells that cast light on the plants growing in a separate area. The polluted water is
filtered through a series of microbial fuel cells until it becomes clean enough to water the
isolated plants, which coexist in homeostatic equilibrium with other microorganisms.
Expert support: Diego Liedo Lavaniegos
Project development supported by: Espacio Fundación Telefónica Lima, Fundación Telefónica Mexico
Project presentation in Ljubljana supported by:
EU – Creative Europe, Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia, Municipality of Ljubljana, Mexican Agency for
International Cooperation for Development, Embassy of Mexico in Vienna

The work of Gilberto Esparza (MX) involves electronic and robotic means to investigate the impacts of
technology in everyday life, social relationships, the environment, and urban structures. His practice employs
recycling consumer technology and biotechnology experiments, including research projects on alternative
energies. Esparza has exhibited worldwide and received the Prix Ars Electronica Golden Nica Award in Hybrid Art
(2015), the 2nd prize in VIDA 13.0 Art & Artificial Life competition, and the VIDA 9.0 prize for Latin American
Productions. gilbertoesparza.net

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Aljoša Abrahamsberg (SI)
The Game has Begun in Secret
Aljoša Abrahamsberg has been on the hunt
for signals from the territories of the

Miha Fras
electro-magnetic spectrum for years. For
Sonoretum, the 8-channel sonic environment,
the author created a soundscape consisting of
archive recordings of his eavesdropping of
signals that he has been intercepting since
1997 using various different radio devices. The
audio material that was recorded at Marko
Peljhan’s Makrolab, an artistic observatory
temporarily set-up at various locations
worldwide, has been supplemented by
recordings from other places around the
world, where performances of the formations
Signal-Sever!, Scatter! and Spektr! were
hosted.
The signals used for Sonoretum come from
NMT and satellite phones, satellite, maritime,
police, amateur radio communications, and
soundscapes intercepted at short, medium,
and long wave ranges using AM, FM, CW, and
USB radio modulation modes.
myspace.com/maxnullo

Aljoša Abrahamsberg (SI) has been a member of the Makrolab crew since the start of the project in 1997. He was
one of the performers at Wardenclyffe Situations and collaborated on projects such as Scatter!, Signal-Sever! and
Spektr!, presented at various art festivals worldwide. Since 2011 he has been the art director of the Dimenzija
Napredka gallery in Solkan. In 2012 he curated the intermedia Pixxelpoint festival in Nova Gorica, Slovenia. He is
also a videographer and author of over one hundred TV shows about contemporary art.

220
Adam W. Brown, Robert Root-Bernstein (US)
ReBioGeneSys – Origins of Life
ReBioGeneSys – Origins of Life is a hybrid installation that utilizes the processes and
materials of science to ask fundamental questions about how all life seems to
proceed from previous life and yet had to emerge from inorganic materials. Is life
something special or is the possibility of life inherent in matter itself? ReBioGeneSys
is a fully functioning scientific experiment capable of being reconfigured into any
real or imaginary world, be it Venus, Titan, or our prebiotic Earth. By combining all
the scientific research on the origins of life in one set of integrated processes,
ReBioGeneSys creates “mashed-up” extreme minimal ecosystems theoretically
capable of forming the self-organizing chemistries necessary to produce
semi-living molecules and perhaps even protocells.
adamwbrown.net/projects-2/rebiogenesys-origins-of-life
Automated control design: Barry Tigner
Supported by: National Science Foundation, Michigan State University
Special thanks: The Physics and Astronomy Machine Shop, MSU,
Scott Bankroff – Laboratory Glass, MSU

Adam W. Brown (US) is an intermedia artist whose work incorporates art and science hybrids
that examine the phenomena of life and living systems. For over a decade Brown has been
creating work that attempts to destabilize our anthropocentric view of the world by examining
historical relationships between human and non-human species and living systems. Adam Brown
is an associate professor of Electronic Art and Intermedia and Director of the BRIDGE Artist in
Residence program in the Department of Art, Art History and Design at Michigan State
University.
Robert Root-Bernstein (US) is a professor of Physiology and MacArthur Fellow at Michigan State
University, US. His laboratory research concerns the origins and evolution of metabolic control
systems and autoimmune diseases. He also explores the intersections of arts and sciences
through historical, philosophical, and experimental studies. He is an editor of Leonardo: The
Journal of the International Society for Art, Science and Technology, and the author of four books
including Sparks of Genius, a study of the ways in which artists and scientist think alike.

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Earth Without Humans II
International symposium, exhibitions and workshops
07.06. – 07.07.2017

What might have been considered science conditions. Society becomes but a derivative
fiction a few years ago, can now be experi- of astrobiology, requiring nothing but the
enced in real time as the manifestation of a right mixture of biology and chemistry to
positive utopia, which predicts a change of survive. For the neoliberal scientific and
absolutely everything in the near future: how technological complex, the shift of applica-
we travel, how we communicate, what we tions into the unregulated territories of outer
eat, how we dress, how we reach decisions, space signifies a move away from ethical and
how we participate, how we trade … basically moral principles, which restrict its expansion-
how we live. The power centers are shifting ist politics.
before our eyes and this shift is geo-strategi- In this perspective, the scientific research
cally moving from our planet into space. It is and the new technologies that are being
full of successful content platforms (Google, developed to create the conditions for
Amazon, Uber, Facebook …), which reflect survival on the Red planet at the same time
the trans-nationality of the internet and other seem to signify the end of life on Earth. The
telecommunication technologies into space. catastrophic scenario of exodus to other
Unlike the 1960s space race, in which the two celestial bodies can be read through the
superpowers raced for the moon, the current series of technological solutions, developed
prospect of domination can be seen in the to make survival on Mars possible. Radical
race for Mars. conditions, biotechnologies, synthetic
The universal role of capital doubles with the biology, exo-life, extremophiles, artificial life,
universality of western science and the artificial intelligence, quantum and memo-
ubiquity of large content and technological ry-driven computing, robotic architecture
platforms, which are starting to grow too big etc. seem like the most forward-thinking
for our blue planet. Telecommunication concepts that humanity has to offer right
infrastructures are leaving Earth and settling now. The subtle difference between the
in its orbit, the Moon Village is being avant-garde space concepts from the
designed as a base for extraplanetary mining, previous century, which anticipated an
and Mars is a platform for testing new improvement in the living conditions on
technologies, materials, and solutions that Earth, and the technological advances of
are (currently) in the logic of time on Earth our own age, in the most meaningful way
not necessary. In the vein of Moore’s Law, introduces the possibility of life on Mars as an
which anticipates the double growth of alternative to life on Earth. It would seem as
capacities in integrated computer circuits though, for some people, Earth is not an
every year, the exponential growth of techno- option anymore, or they imagine the blue
logical advances allows us to think and plan planet in shades of red. Dried out, with a
applications outside the bounds of Earth, toxic atmosphere and a handful of colonies,
projecting them into a kind of intraplanetary where life is organized on the basis of
utopian realism. In these outer reaches, biopolitics. Or, to put it briefly: Mars as a
society as we know it on Earth is reduced to greeting from the future.
mere biological functions in radical living Text: Jurij Krpan

222
Partners: European Digital Art and Science Network, Expert support: Marko Peljhan, Miha Turšič, Ewen
Projekt Atol Institute, UCSB, MAT, Systemics Lab, SETI Chardronnet
Institute, Naprave Production and PR: Jana Putrle Srdić
Supported by: Creative Europe program of the Europe- Light design and technical support: Jure Sajovic, Boris
an Union, Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia Britovšek
and Municipality of Ljubljana – Department for Culture BioTehna & Rampa: Simon Gmajner, Kristijan Tkalec,
Curators / Kapelica Gallery: Jurij Krpan, Sandra Sajovic Petra Milič, Urška Spitzer

Brane Zorman (SI)


ElektroMagnetikSpektrum
ElektroMagnetikSpektrum is part of the EMS
Memory Trackers (2016) composition, edited
to suit the 8-channel sonic environment of
Sonoretum. Based on the positions and
color constellations of solar systems, stars,
planets, and the endless flux of scattering
electromagnetic radiation of past ancient
and distant echoes, the author collects and
transforms EM information, translating it to
Photo courtesy by the artist

the narrow range of frequencies audible to


humans. Zorman maps the continuous
invisible and inaudible flux of fading time,
pulsation and radiation that flow in the form
of weakened and deteriorated segments,
which are reflected from and absorbed by
the bodies with which they collide. The sonic
sculpture ElektroMagnetikSpektrum transcends
the EM radio wave recording, which now
covers the space of the Sonoretum time
capsule like a gossamer veil.

Brane Zorman (SI) is a composer, sound and radio artist, sound manipulator and producer. His work examines
and explores the possibilities of processing, presenting, perceiving, understanding, positioning, manipulating,
and reinterpreting sound and space. By employing sophisticated and simple tools, and old and digital
technologies, his work traverses the field of music, new media, sound art, and radio art. www.branezorman.si

223
Danny Bazo (US), Marko Peljhan (SI), Karl Yerkes (US)
Somnium
Somnium is a multimodal cybernetic installation to contemplate discoveries of
exoplanets and the potential for extraterrestrial intelligent life in our galaxy. It uses
light, sound, and robotics to bridge the vastly different macro- and micro-scales of
cosmic search and human experience. The work draws inspiration from Johannes
Kepler’s prototypical science fiction tale, Somnium (Dream), which describes what
an observer on the moon might see while they gaze at the Earth from afar. The
installation uses data gathered by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope mission to echo
this question for our specific time: “What might an observer on Earth see while they
gaze at the many other possible Earths that exist within our galaxy?”
www.projekt-atol.si/project/somnium
Produced by: Projekt Atol Institute
Co-produced by: MAT, SYSTEMICS Lab, UCSB
Project developed in collaboration with Jon Jenkins at SETI Institute’s Artist in Residence Program.
Supported by: Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia, Municipality of Ljubljana –
Department for Culture

Danny Bazo (US) builds robots and multimedia installations using Geiger counters, surveillance
cameras, robotic arms, video projections, synthesized sounds, and other technology. His works
have exhibited at international venues such as SIGGRAPH, ACM Multimedia, Mois de la Photo à
Montréal, ISEA Dubai, and Run Run Shaw CMC Hong Kong. He holds degrees in engineering
from UC Berkeley and University of Bristol, UK, and a PhD from UC Santa Barbara’s Media Arts
and Technology Program.
Marko Peljhan’s (SI) work intersects art, science, and engineering. His work includes projects
like Makrolab, the Interpolar Transnational Art Science Constellation and the Arctic Perspective
Initiative. In 2001 he received the Golden Nica with Carsten Nicolai. His work has been exhibited
internationally at biennales (Venice, Lyon, Istanbul, Gwangju…), festivals (documenta, ISEA, Ars
Electronica…) and museums / art institutions (YCAM, ICC-NT, MOMA PS1, Garage…). He serves as
professor and director of the MAT Systemics Lab at the UCSB. www.projekt-atol.si
Karl Yerkes (US) develops musical and virtual reality systems, performs electroacoustic music
internationally, and teaches media arts and technology at graduate level. His research on digital
musical instruments and interactive, distributed audiovisual systems was published at
international conferences such as NIME and ICLC and his multimedia installations exhibited in
Slovenia and California. Karl holds degrees in Computer Engineering (BS) from UW and Media
Arts & Technology (PhD) from UCSB. karlyerkes.com

224
Katarina Petrović (RS/NL)
Cosmologicus
Cosmologicus is a custom-made software and installation that translates radio
emissions from the planet Jupiter into a semantic stream. Using the word-number
database generated in the work Lexicon Liber Novus (Petrović, 2016), the invisible
order of electron particles coming from the distant planet is made intelligible
through language. Or so it seems. Jupiter-generated poetry gives way to an infinite
interpretation of the planet's emissions. The computer and the spectator become
mediums of the largest planet of our Solar system, oracles of the mythological
Jupiter, attempting to construct sense and meaning from the generated data. The
installation comprises the software, projected moving text into a black water cube,
Miha Fras

and a recording of Jupiter radio emissions made on the ground.


www.katarinapetrovic.net/project/cosmologicus
Software made in collaboration with: Mirko Lazović
Audio recordings: NASA’s education and outreach project Radio Jove and affiliated Heliotown
Observatory in New Mexico

Katarina Petrović (RS/NL). is an interdisciplinary artist and a researcher working at the


intersections of art and science. Interested in the issues of translation and interpretation, she
investigates the structures and modes of information organization within different symbolical
structures like language, mathematics, and code. Focusing on their universality and fluidity, she
constructs narratives ambiguous documents in which the facts and poetics stand side by side.
www.katarinapetrovic.net
photo courtesy by the artist

225
Miha Fras
Green Wall Community + Naprave Robotics Lab
Green Wall: Plant—Machine Cohabitation
Establishing the right conditions for plant growth in unusual environments is one of
the themes with which we want to bring attention to the living organisms that can
survive and exist in extreme environments. When we talk about astrobiology, it is
relatively easy to imagine the radical conditions in space, but it is much harder to
imagine the survival of various organisms in situations that do not yet even exist,
and can merely be imagined or predicted. To simulate extreme conditions we have
designed a tactical environment in which three distinct biotopes feed information
to one another—aquaponics, hydroponics, and robotics existing in mutual
codependence. The project, named Green Wall, aims to create a community in

Hana Jošić
which the participants self-organize, based on their interests. One group takes care
of the hydroponic system of plants growing in vertical modules, the second group
constructs the aquarium biotope, while the third group creates a spider bot and a
sensory system that will allow the plants to communicate with the robot, which will
water each one individually. The ultimate goal of the project is to create a hybrid
ecosystem in which plants, with the aid of technology, will be able to thrive without
human intervention.
www.biotehna.org
Partner & expert collaborator: Naprave Robotics Lab
Green Wall community (SI): Slavko Glamočanin, Tanja Gawish, Simon Gmajner, Staša Guček, Maj
Hrovat, Boštjan Kobal, Jan Krek, Ana Lokovšek, Anamarija Pocrnjić, Aljaž Rudolf, Anže Sekelj, Jan
Skomina, Filip Maj Špendl, Mirjan Švagelj, Kristijan Tkalec
Thanks to: Jan Babič / Institute Jožef Stefan – Department for Automation, Biocybernetics and
Robotics

BioTehna Vivarium—Animals, Plants and Robots Vivarium is part of BioTehna—the Platform of


Artistic Research of Living Systems. We explore the codependency between animals, plants, and
robots. Unlike BioTehna, which is a laboratory for the research of micro and nano systems,
Vivarium is a space meant for working with organisms that can be observed with the naked eye
and grown without the aid of incubators or containers.

226
Saša Spačal, Slavko Glamočanin (SI)
Syncness
12.01. – 05.02.2016

Syncness is an audiovisual interface that


researches human ability to relate to beings
that are considered inferior by anthropocentric
arborescent taxonomic classifications such
as the tree of life. It is an invitation to try to
vocally sync with crickets and develop a
relationship. Syncness creates opportunities
for sound synchronization between human
beings and crickets. Identification of signals
transmitted by the animals is similar to close
encounters of the third kind, but the alienated
other is replaced by Acheta domesticus
crickets. It is a first step towards an algorithmic
language that would enable non-verbal
interspecies communication. The audiovisual
dialog is transmitted to space via radio as to
reflect upon the human urge to find extra-
terrestrial life and establish relationships with
beings that are alien to our species.
projectsyncness.wordpress.com

Associate professionals: Mirjan Švagelj, Anil Podgornik,


Shlosart Metalart
3D modeling and implementation plans: Blaž Šolar
Produced by: Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova Institute

Saša Spačal (SI) is a post-media artist with a background in humanities who is currently working at the
intersection of living systems research, sound design, and interactive visualization. How technology shapes our
lives and the human experience is at the center of her work, which develops around the idea of connections
between the different systems as the major source of complexity in the environment. Her work focuses primarily
on the post-human state, in which human beings exist and act as one of many elements in the ecosystem.
www.agapea.si
Slavko Glamočanin started in the computer demo scene, where he was mostly active in making music and
co-created the first Slovenian breakbeat compilation, Monkorama. He continued with programming and
exploring the media and he created the programming platform naprava for that purpose. www.naprava.net
After one-way video/effects he proceeded with interactive projects, motion capture, kinect and
openGL visualizations. His main interests are synesthesia, systems, and interactive.

227
Miha Fras
Nelo Akamatsu (JP)
Chijikinkutsu
01.09. – 29.09.2016

Chijikinkutsu is a coinage of two Japanese words: chijiki and suikinkutsu. Chijiki


means geomagnetism: terrestrial magnetic properties that have always existed and
affect everything on Earth, but cannot be perceived by the human senses. A
suikinkutsu is a sound installation for Japanese traditional gardens, invented in the
Edo period.
While utilizing the action of geomagnetism, which is normally treated as a subject
of science, this sound installation expands the subtle sounds of suikinkutsu in the
context of the Japanese perspective on nature. A round surface of water in the
glass with a floating magnetized needle is reminiscent of a tiny Earth with its
geomagnetism. The fainter the sounds of the glass, the more keenly listeners’
sensibility is sharpened. In the meantime, they realize that the sounds are not
coming from outside their bodies, but already exist inside their minds.
www.neloakamatsu.jp/chijikinkutsu-eng.html
Concept, space design, hardware development, sound-sequence programming: Nelo Akamatsu

Nelo Akamatsu (JP) creates art works across several media such as installations with electric
devices, event and video installations, sculptures, paintings, and photos. He has an MFA from the
Department of Intermedia Art at Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Akamatsu’s
work has been presented in Japan and Europe. He has been awarded with a Golden Nica in the
category Digital Musics & Sound Art at Prix Ars Electronica 2015 and received the Taro Okamoto
Memorial Award of Contemporary Art in 2004 and 2014.
www.neloakamatsu.jp

228
Miha Fras

Ralf Baecker (DE)


Interface I
22.03. – 16.04.2017

In the project Interface I, the artist employs the artistic method for researching the
mutual responsiveness and interactivity of various processes, which, due to the
unpredictable nature of their movement and the unique aesthetic functions of their
systems, invoke a metaphysical experience, prompting the viewer to ponder about
the internal logic, or perhaps even the intelligence, of the machine. This, in turn,
sparks questions about the perception of artificial intelligence and synthetic
emotions beyond a computer’s operations. The mechatronic installation Interface I
is another stage in the evolution of Baecker’s artistic expression, which, from
project to project, creates an increasingly effective visual /performative language
that is recognizable as the characteristic beauty of artistic machines.
www.rlfbckr.org/work/interface-i
Produced by: NOME Gallery Berlin, 2016
Research and experiments of Interface I were carried out within the framework of Ralf Baecker’s
research project Time of Non-Reality at the Graduate School, University of the Arts, Berlin.

Ralf Baecker (DE) is an artist working at the intersection of art, technology and science. Through
installations and machines, Baecker explores fundamental mechanisms of action and the effects
of new media and technologies. Baecker has been awarded multiple prizes and grants for his
artistic work, including a Honorary Mention at Prix Ars Electronica in 2012 and 2014, and 2nd prize
at the VIDA 14.0 Art & Artificial Life competition. His work has been presented at major
international festivals and exhibitions around the world. www.rlfbckr.org

229
LABoral
Centro de Arte
y Creación Industrial
Gijón, Spain

LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial is LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial es
a multidisciplinary institution focused on una institución multidisciplinar centrada en el
exchange and cooperation between art, intercambio y la cooperación entre el arte, la
science, technology, society, and the creative ciencia, la tecnología, la sociedad y las
industries. It engages in research and industrias creativas. Realiza programas de
development, education, production, investigación y desarrollo, educación,
exhibitions, and artist-in-residence programs. producción, exposiciones y residencias de
Launched in 2007, the center is located in the artistas. Inaugurado en 2007, el centro está
Knowledge Mile of Gijón, on the perimeter of situado en la Milla de Conocimiento de Gijón,
the eastern side of the city, between the en el perímetro del lado este de la ciudad,
technological campus of the Universidad de entre el campus tecnológico de la Universidad
Oviedo and the Science and Technology Park de Oviedo y el Parque Científico y Tecnológico
of Gijón, where the most advanced companies de Gijón, donde se encuentran los proyectos
and research projects in Asturias are situated de investigación y empresas más avanzadas
alongside different cultural institutions. de Asturias, junto a diferentes instituciones
culturales.

230
Conceived as a unique project among art Concebida desde su origen como un proyecto
centers in Spain, LABoral functions as a singular y único en el tejido de centros de arte de
technological and sociocultural open lab for España, LABoral opera como un laboratorio
research, development, and innovation, abierto de investigación, desarrollo e innovación
based on a cross-sectional approach tecnológico y sociocultural, a partir de un
comprising different fields of knowledge, planteamiento transversal y entre ámbitos,
communities, and practices. So it constitutes comunidades y prácticas. Se ofrece, así, como
a node for integrated and distributed un nodo de investigación integral y distribuida a
research carried out through its various partir de sus diversos programas de producción,
programs of production, exhibition, exposición, educación o comunicación.
education, and communication. A lo largo de la última década, grandes
Throughout the last decade, large thematic programas temáticos han puesto de relieve
events have highlighted some of the key algunos de los temas clave relacionados con el
themes related to art, science, and digital arte, la ciencia y la cultura digital: desde la
culture: from historical reviews of the origins revisión histórica de los orígenes de la
of interactivity, shown in retrospective interactividad, mostrada en exposiciones
exhibitions such as Feedback, to analysis of retrospectivas como el Feedback, hasta el
the most innovative domains of video game análisis de los aspectos más innovadores de la
culture, exhibited in Gameworld, Playware cultura del vídeo-juego, a través de muestras
and Homo Ludens Ludens. como Gameworld, Playware y Homo Ludens
These exhibitions and other comparative Ludens.
explorations related to traditional concepts Las exposiciones de tesis y otras exploraciones
and emerging parameters of digital culture comparadas, relacionadas con los conceptos
and science, were developed in process as tradicionales y los parámetros emergentes de la
paradigm, Experimental Station, datamatics cultura digital y la ciencia, se desarrollaron en
by Ryoji Ikeda and banquete_nodes and exposiciones como el proceso como paradigma,
networks, with reference to Santiago Ramón y Estación Experimental, datamatics de Ryoji Ikeda
Cajal and Manuel Castells. y banquete_nodos y redes, con referencias a
The exhibitions developed at LABoral through Santiago Ramón y Cajal y Manuel Castells.
the EDASN program led new incursions into Las exposiciones producidas en LABoral a través
artistic and scientific practices through an del programa EDASN permitieron nuevas
extensive program of seminars, workshops, incursiones en prácticas artísticas y científicas a
and the exhibition Material Prima in 2016. The través de un extenso programa de seminarios,
show Monsters of the Machine examined the talleres y la exposición Materia Prima en 2016. La
role of women in art and science, with a muestra Los Monstros de la Máquina examinó el
tribute to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, raising papel de la mujer en el arte y la ciencia,
the challenges and concerns of society in the rindiendo un homenaje al Frankenstein de Mary
face of the scientific and technological Shelley, y planteó los retos y las preocupaciones
advances of the twenty-first century. de la sociedad frente a los avances científicos y
LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial tecnológicos del siglo XXI.
is a multidisciplinary institution that LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial es
produces, disseminates, and fosters access una institución multidisciplinar que produce,
to new forms of culture emerging from the difunde y favorece el acceso a las nuevas formas
creative use of ICTs. Its cross-cutting program culturales nacidas de la utilización creativa de las
targets all audiences with the ultimate goal tecnologías de la información y la comunicación
of generating and sharing knowledge. (TICs). Su programación, transversal e integrada,
www.laboralcentrodearte.org está dirigida a todos los públicos y tiene como
fin último generar y compartir conocimiento.
www.laboralcentrodearte.org

231
LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial
Activities

Roundtables MATERIA PRIMA


Roundtable and screening
MATERIA PRIMA Gijón
Roundtable 07.04.2016
Gijón Looking at the sky. Observation, data and
13.11.2015 visualisation
Artists speaking of science Asturian Astronomical Society Omega, Asturias;
Nelo Akamatsu (artist) Luigi Toffolatti, (Physics Department, University
of Oviedo; winner of the call for the visualization
MATERIA PRIMA of astronomic data)
Roundtable
Gijón LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
14.11.2015 MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Astronomy and open code Roundtable
Jesús Rodríguez (Data Management Division Gijón
and Operations of the Europeam Southern 18.11.2016
Observatory – ESO, Chile) and Juan Menéndez Art and Science from the Gender Perspective
Blanco (Asturian Astronomical Society Omega, Mary Flanagan (artist and educator), Gretta
Asturias, Spain) Louw (artist and researcher), Regina de Miguel
(artist) and Marc Garret (co-founder and artistic
director of Furtherfield, and curator of Monsters
MATERIA PRIMA of the Machine)
Roundtable
Gijón LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
14.11.2015 MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Astronomy and open code Roundtable
Jesús Rodríguez (Data Management Division and Gijón
Operations of the Europeam Southern 09.03.2017
Observatory – ESO, Chile) and Juan Menéndez Women, art, science and technology
Blanco (Asturian Astronomical Society Omega, Jara Cosculluela (educator specialized in
Asturias, Spain) feminist research and gender analysis), Melania
Fraga (journalist in Gender Perspective and
MATERIA PRIMA professional in the field of multimedia
Roundtable and screening communication), Joana Moll, (artist and
Gijón researcher), Maria Teresa Samper, (sociologist
19.02.2016 and member of the group “gender in science“
Speaking of science at the University of Valencia) and Job Sánchez
David Álvarez (blog Fauna Cantábrica), Jorge (artist and teacher)
Chachero (ASECIC member and nature
audiovisual producer) Lorena Lozano (artist
and biologist) and John Rojas (ASECIC –
Spanish Film and Scientific Image Association)

232
Workshops MATERIA PRIMA
Workshop
MATERIA PRIMA Gijón
Workshop 08.04.2016
Gijón Didactic visualisation of astronomic data
14.11.2015 – 08.05.2016 Alba G. Corral (artist)
Your name in DNA sequence
LABoral Mediation team MATERIA PRIMA
Workshop
MATERIA PRIMA Gijón
Workshop 08.04.2016 – 09.04.2016
Gijón SkyPointer. Workshop to manufacture
14.11.2015 – 08.05.2016 a laser pointer
3d Scanner Juan Menéndez and David Vázquez
LABoral Mediation team

MATERIA PRIMA Exhibitions


Workshop
Gijón MATERIA PRIMA
14.11.2015 – 08.05.2016 Exhibition
Hybrid workshop Gijón
LABoral Mediation team 14.11.2015 – 08.05.2016
see Page 236
MATERIA PRIMA
Call for participation and workshop LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
Gijón MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
14.11.2015 – 01.02.2016 Exhibition
Design and production of DIY tools for amateur Gijón
astronomy 18.11.2016 – 31.08.2017
fabLAB Asturias team La Cura
see Page 250
MATERIA PRIMA
Workshop
Gijón Conferences
18.11.2015 – 08.05.2016
Runner Robot MATERIA PRIMA
LABoral Mediation team Conference
Gijon
28.11.2015
Transferencias - Philosophy, Art and Science
Verónica G. Ardura (plastic artist and college
professor) and Lorena Lozano (artist and
biologist)

233
MATERIA PRIMA MATERIA PRIMA
Conference Conference
Gijón Gijón
23.02.2016 07.05.2016
Transferencias - Bioethics and Technology Transferencias- Transmedia Narratives and
Yolanda Argüelles (nurse and member of the Science Fiction
Ethics Committee of Area VIII. Asturias) Nuria Rodríguez (translator and researcher in
contemporary critical theory)
MATERIA PRIMA
Conference Educational Programs
Oviedo
27.02.2016 MATERIA PRIMA
Transferencias – Knowledge and pedagogy Educational Program: School
Esperanza Fernandez González (college Gijón
professor) 16.12. – 18.12.2015; 13.01. – 20.01.2016,
17.02. – 24.02.2016, and 16.03. – 23.03.2016
MATERIA PRIMA Art and Science DIY@Andy Gracie (artist)
Conference
Gijón LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
12.03.2016 MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Transferencias - Audiovisual media: Project Educational programme:
documentation and management School
Melania Fraga (journalist in Gender Perspective Gijón
and professional in the field of multimedia 21.11. – 23.11.2016, 12.12. – 15.12.2016
communication) A Story Never Told from Below
Regina de Miguel (artist)
MATERIA PRIMA
Conference LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
Gijón MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
16.04.2016 Educational program: Cultural mediators
Transferencias - Local, artists and territory Gijón
Leticia González (Art History PhD) 30.11.2016 – 02.12.2016;
15.03. – 17.03.2017; 26.04.2017 – 28.04.2017
Where is the mediation bureau? Frankenstein
House.
Jordi Ferreiro (artist and educator) and María
Acaso (educator and researcher)

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Mediation Programs
LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /
MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Mediation program: Street performance
Gijón
16.12.2016
Metrópolis
Escuela Superior de Arte Dramático de Gijón
(ESAD) [School of Performing Arts of Gijón]

LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /


MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Mediation program: Concert
Gijón
17.12.2016
Sombras en alta fidelidad
Fasenuova (experimental music collective)

LOS MONSTRUOS DE LA MÁQUINA /


MONSTERS OF THE MACHINE
Mediation program: Illustrations on
Mary Shelley‘s work (live)
Gijón
18.12.2016
Illustrated Frankenstein
Thanya Castrillón and Eli García (illustrators)

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Materia Prima
Exhibition
14.11.2015 – 08.05.2016

The exhibition focuses on new alliances between art and


science, and the materia prima that their protagonists work
with: computer code.

The core of the exhibition consists of a set of interactive visitor labs. Education and communica-
tion are not a side program but the central component in this exploration of art and science.

Sergio Redruello /LABoral


The labs are surrounded by exploratory displays featuring outstanding artistic works as well
as R&D prototypes—atelier and laboratory meld together here. Between these areas, we find
references to the rich history of the liaison of art and science.
To quote Merriam-Webster dictionary, a laboratory is “a place providing opportunity for
experimentation, observation, or practice in a field of study.” Although in our common under-
standing of laboratories, we tend to see them as places where highly secret experiments are
conducted and high-cost equipment is used. Places where access is only granted to those
who have a good relationship to the people working there or a mandate to enter them. They
are where processes take place that have a direct impact on knowledge.
Curated by Gerfried Stocker, Ars Electronica Center Linz

Exhibition setting focused on laboratory structure


MATERIA PRIMA is an exhibition concentrating 2009. For seven years now we have been
on artistic/scientific processes and the displaying, discussing, and making practices
generation of knowledge in art. Rather than accessible that are the focus of artists,
presenting objects, this exhibition focuses on scientists, and technologists. It goes without
bringing those processes to the surface that saying that a citizen’s lab cannot, for example,
confront artists (and sometimes even include the entire diversity of existing
scientists). The participating artists were asked laboratories or their high-end equipment. Nor
to work on adapting these processes for can it meet the requirements of sophisticated
presentation within an exhibition context. And scientific research. However, we can make
in order to underline their process-oriented experiments visible, discuss observations, and
approaches, it was clear from the beginning enable participants to gain some practice with
that we, as curators, should try to leave a the machines and processes on display: these
so-called classical contemporary presentation are the parameters that we set and that guided
of artworks behind us and create an exhibition us in our approach to establishing a laboratory
setting that focused on laboratory structure. structure within an exhibition context.
But not only the systematic processes inherent In shifting through the diversity of artistic
in the artworks were to be explored in this way: practice to be presented in the MATERIA
more importantly, the laboratory—as site of PRIMA exhibition, the works were divided into
experimentation, observation and practice— six labs, based on the phenomena which the
was to be brought into the exhibition space artists had chosen to focus on. Each lab
and made accessible to visitors. represents a selection of the artworks on
Of course this approach is not new and Ars display, and showcases them via images and
Electronica Center Linz has been testing this texts that are related to the central topic of
kind of laboratory structure since January the lab.

236
BioLab

Gene Gun Hack, Rüdiger Trojok, 2012

The BioLab is represented by six works that Similar to Trojok, the artist Matthew Gardiner
explore recent questions in genetics. (AU) was inspired by the idea of using a gene
Drosophila titanus by Andy Gracie (UK/ES) gun in a similar way as the British police are
is an ongoing and long-term project which said to use them: DNA sequences containing
through a process of experimentation and particular codes are deployed to mark
artificial selection aims to breed a species suspicious persons with a shot from a special
of the fruit fly, Drosophila, that would pistol. In his work Synthetic Memetic, Matthew
theoretically be capable of living on Saturn’s Gardiner composed a DNA sequence in such
largest moon, Titan. The project needs to a way that the series of nucleotide bases in
adhere to a rigorous scientific methodology it correspond to the letters of the song title
and framework in which the artist can act “Never Gonna Give You Up” by Rick Astley, and
and at the same time artistically investigate then integrated them symbolically into a pistol.
concepts related to the topics of species, It is a reference to the viral systematics of this
biological perfection, perception, and future song that—having first topped charts world-
life. wide in the 1980s—is still causing a commotion
online: users who click on some seemingly
Gene Gun Hack by Rüdiger Trojok (DE) is a innocuous headline, image, or video are
scientific instrument. The biologist Rüdiger unexpectedly redirected to Rick Astley’s
Trojok succeeded in building one of his own catchy tune.
and in slashing its cost to a mere 50 euros.
Normally the gene gun is one of the most Teresa Dillon (IE), Naomi Griffin-Murtagh (IE),
important tools used in modern biology. Many Claire Dempsey (IE), and Aisling McCrudden
of today’s genetically modified plants have (IE) are artists who once came together for a
been produced with this technology, which course on synthetic biology and posed the
is a kind of a bio-ballistics device used to shoot following question: Can animals be
a particle of gold coated with DNA into a cell. transformed into medical devices? Opimilk, as
Trojok has not only provided a DIY version of this Dublin-based team calls their idea, involves
a gene gun, he has at the same time critically transforming the bovine organism into a living
questioned developments in genetic bioreactor, and so producing complete and
engineering. effective medications that can be milked right
from the cow’s udder.

237
Drosophila titanus, Andy Gracie

ARS DNA Workshop, Ars Electronica Futurelab Biopresence, Shiho Fukuhara, Georg Tremmel, 2003
Sergio Redruello / LABoral

Biopresence, Shiho Fukuhara, Georg Tremmel, 2003 Opimilk, Teresa Dillon, Naomi Griffin-Murtagh,
Claire Dempsey, Aisting McCrudden, 2013-
2014

238
Based on DNA systematics, a group of Ars Biopresence by Shiho Fukuhara (JP) and
Electronica Futurelab researchers asked Georg Tremmel (AT) creates “Human DNA
during an ARS DNA workshop, how digital Trees” by transcoding the essence of a human
data might be stored to memory for 10, 100, or being within the DNA of a tree in order to
even 1,000 years without having to transfer it create “Living Memorials” or “Transgenic
periodically to new data storage media? Now Tombstones.” Biopresence is collaborating
this question is not new, and so numerous labs with scientist and artist Joe Davis on his DNA
are already working on it. But then the Manifold algorithm, which allows for the
importance of this idea was transferred to a transcoding and entwinement of human and
workshop with citizens in Linz and then to one tree DNAs.
in Gijon, where audiences were invited to
understand the latest research on DNA as a
medium for memory, as well as to convert their
name or some other series of characters into a
DNA sequence. Simultaneously they were
asked to investigate how much they would
have to pay today to have this done in a lab.

Biopresence (JP/AT) is an art venture formed by Shiho Fukuhara and Georg Tremmel with the purpose of
exploring, participating and ultimately defining the most relevant playing field of the 21st century: the impact of
biotechnologies on society and the human perception of these coming changes. Biopresence creates Human
DNA trees by transcoding the essence of a human being within the DNA of a tree in order to create “Living
Memorials” or “Transgenic Tombstones.” Biopresence is collaborating with scientist and artist Joe Davis on his
DNA Manifold Algorithm, which allows for the transcoding and entwinement of human and tree DNAs.
www.biopresence.com
Matthew Gardiner (AU) is an artist most well known for his work with origami and robotics. He coined the term
Oribot 折りボト and then created the field of art/science research called Oribotics. Oribotics is a field of research
that thrives on the aesthetic, biomechanic, and morphological connections between nature, origami, and
robotics. Matthew Gardiner is currently an artist and senior lead researcher at Ars Electronica Futurelab, in Linz
Austria. www.matthewgardiner.net
Andy Gracie (UK/ES) works across various disciplines including installation, robotics, sound, video, and
biological practice. Recently his work has involved studies and reactions to the science of astrobiology; notions
of the origins of life coupled with a re-examination of its boundaries. His practice employs scientific theory and
practice to question our relationships with the environment and the notion of the “other” while simultaneously
bringing into focus the very relationship between art and science. www.hostprods.net
Naomi Griffin-Murtagh (IE) studied at the National College of Art and Design Dublin and is now a product
designer in Northern Ireland. Claire Dempsey (IE) has a degree in Immunology from Trinity College Dublin, and is
currently working on her PhD at University of Birmingham. Aisling McCrudden (IE) has a degree in Human Health
and Disease from Trinity College Dublin. This project is a result of a collaboration in an Idea Translation Lab in the
Science Gallery, offered to TCD and NCAD students and coordinated by Dr Teresa Dillon (IE). The project ran over
12 weeks and the students had to pool their resources to come up with projects centered on the field of synthetic
biology. The team asked the question, “What if farmers were pharmacists?” The answer they came up with was
Opimilk. The project explores the potential of synthetic biology to use Opiorphin as an alternative to treat
chronic pain. www.behance.net/naomigriffinmurtagh
Rüdiger Trojok (DE) studied systems and synthetic biology at Potsdam, Copenhagen (DTU), and Freiburg
universities. He invented a novel contraceptive method based on genetically altered lactic acid bacteria, worked
as a freelance consultant for the Office of Technology Assessment by the German Parliament on biohacking and
synthetic biology, and has worked for the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis at the
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology on the EU Synenergene project since 2014. He is currently establishing a citizen
science biolab in Berlin, and supports open-source biotechnology projects related to public life, politics, and the
arts. www.openbioprojects.net

239
FabLab

The idea of making high-tech processes and pressure, ultraviolet radiation, or the amount
flexible manufacturing equipment accessible of carbon monoxide we are exposed to in our
to visitors is, of course, part of the exhibition daily life. The person wearing this smart dress
concept. Hence LABoral’s existing will receive direct feedback about his or her
FabLab—and all its machines, tools and exposure through changes in the dress’s
equipment—was transferred to the exhibition lighting.
floor. In workshops visitors are trained to use
them, and in doing so become part of this Another artwork on display is by Belgian artist
discursive exhibition project. In addition, the Nick Ervinck. For AGRIEBORZ he used
FabLab provides inspiration to participants via images of human organs that he found in
the artworks on display and/or the artists medical manuals as construction material for
working there. creating organic forms, and then realized them
in 3D. With his work he is questioning, on the
Asturian artist María Castellanos and Madrid one hand, the impact of rapid prototyping and
native Alberto Valverde were two of the 3D printing for medical research and, on the
artists working in the FabLab during the other hand, the influence of bioprinting
exhibition. They explore certain man-machine technology in generating organs. Ervinck, who
relationships and intersections. Their work is working parallel to science, is developing
Environment Dress focuses on garments as new realities for different audiences in art,
a kind of sensory device for investigating science, and beyond.
variations in noise, temperature, atmospheric

Nick Ervinck (BE) explores the boundaries between various media and fosters a cross-pollination between the
digital and the physical, Studio Nick Ervinck applies tools and techniques from new media, in order to explore
the aesthetic potential of sculpture, 3D prints, installation, architecture and design. Through his divergent
practice, a strong fascination with the construction of space is noticeable. Not only does Nick Ervinck focus on
the autonomous sculptural object, he also questions its spatial positioning and points to the phenomenological
experience and embodiment of space. Ervinck’s work in short oscillates between the static and the dynamic,
prospecting new virtual or utopian territories. www.nickervinck.com
María Castellanos (ES), artist and researcher, who has a degree and a doctorate in Fine Arts from the University
of Vigo, Spain. Her thesis, La piel biónica. Membranas tecnológicas como interfaces corporales en la práctica
artística, deals with the technological prosthesis, focusing on the hybridizations among cyborgs and wearables,
as a paradigm of expanding human sensorial capabilities. Currently she is an artist in residence at LABoral
Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial, Gijón, Asturias, Spain. mariacastellanos.net
Alberto Valverde (ES), artist and technologist, has wide experience in system design, creation of interactive and
multimedia environments, web design, and robotics. He taught in the Bachelor of Fine Arts program at University
of Vigo, and is currently in the Master of Animation and Audiovisual Illustrated Book at the same university. In his
work, Valverde investigates chaos as way of order, proposing the creation of random vectors, and focuses on the
relationship between man and machine.

240
Sergio Redruello/LABoral

Environment Dress, María Castellanos , Alberto Valverde

Sergio Redruello/LABoral

AGRIEBORZ, Nick Ervinck

241
DataLab

When we look at how data has become the raw measuring instruments are built in and onto
material of a new economy and the basis of a the teacups, measuring the environment of the
new culture, we see how important it is now to cup. The energy produced by these instru-
understand the technologies used to process ments heats the inside of the cups and brews
data, the social and economic value of it, as tea from rainwater and the residues that have
well as the very special nature of digital data fallen into it. This tea produces a little cloud
itself. that contains the essence of the local air. The
Digital data is like its own aggregate state, not cloud again feeds back into the system and
of matter but of information; it is a distinctive becomes the subject of investigation for the
type of information that takes on a distinctive tools connected to the cup. The teacups move
form of appearance as soon as it becomes up and down individually, according to certain
digital. In other words, when it is set free from aspects related to the collected data and
physical boundaries as code, as a series of environmental processes, dancing an endless
zeroes and ones that can be endlessly copied choreography determined by raindrops and
and distributed and transformed into any clouds, particles, measurements, and tea
thinkable form of expression from words to drinking.
sound to image, and—with 3D printing—even
to physical objects. Another data collecting project is ARTSAT1:
The computer has become our universal Invader, which was launched on 28.02.2014
memory machine and being able to deal with (JST). It was the world’s first art satellite sent
the very special powers of data has now be- into orbit as a piggyback payload onboard the
come an ever more important skill. And this H-IIA F23 launch vehicle, and inserted into a
goes beyond mere media literacy; it involves non-sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of 378
the kind of understanding that enables you to km and inclination of 65 degrees. Invader, a
become a creator instead. 10-cm 1U-CubeSat with a mass of 1.85 kg,
continued its steady operation in orbit. It also
This section featured artistic and scientific successfully performed an array of artistic
projects dealing with transformations between missions based on commands from the main
the virtual and physical state of data. ground station at Tama Art University and
under the guidance of the ARTSAT: Art and
Agnes Mayer Brandis’s Teacup Tools are part Satellite Project team. The mission included
of a “Global Teacup Network” and draw atten- algorithmic generation and transmission of
tion to climate-related sciences. Her work synthesized voices, music, and poems, as well
consists of a table and machinery for raising as capturing and transmitting image data and
two or more teacups individually. Various communicating with the ground through a
chatbot program.

Agnes Meyer-Brandis (DE) studied mineralogy for a year, then transferred to the Art Academy in Maastricht,
Düsseldorf Art Academy, and Cologne Media Art Academy. She comes from a background of both sculpture and
new media art. Her work is at the experimental edge of art and science, exploring the zone between fact and
fiction. She realized an artistic experiment in weightlessness in cooperation with the German Space Agency DLR.
In 2011 she started to breed moon geese in Italy. www.ffur.de
The ARTSAT: Art and Satellite Project (JP), which began in 2010, understands Earth-orbiting satellites and
deep-space spacecraft as “media that connect Earth with outer space.” The project launched a miniaturized art
satellite and an independently developed spacecraft to carry out experimental creative practices that utilize data
transmitted from space, including interactive media art and sound/software art. The project, a collaboration
between Tama Art University and the University of Tokyo, is run by members from various fields. artsat.jp

242
Agnes Mayer Brandis Sergio Redruello/LABoral Sergio Redruello/LABoral

ARTSAT1: Invader

Teacup Tools, Agnes Mayer Brandis

243
Sergio Redruello/LABoral
Lapillus Bug, Yasuaki Kakehi, Takayuki Hoshi, Kono Michinari

Sergio Redruello/LABoral

Mobile Instrument, María Ignacia Edwards


Sergio Redruello/LABoral

Chijikinkutsu, Nelo Akamatsu

244
GeoLab

Space and time related data and phenomena installation for Japanese traditional gardens,
in physics and mathematics are the main invented in the Edo period. The sounds of
parameters defining the MATERIA PRIMA’s drops of water falling through an inverted
GeoLab. All the artworks presented here earthenware pot buried under a stone wash-
can be seen as an experiment in visualizing basin resonate through hollow bamboo tubes.
causalities and correlations on earth and Chijikinkutsu is made using water, sewing
beyond. needles, glass tumblers, and coils of copper
wire. The needles floating on the water in the
María Ignacia Edwards’s (CL) Mobile tumblers are magnetized in advance, so they
Instrument, for example, works with are affected by geomagnetism and turn them-
equilibrium, lightness, and the weightless- selves in a north-south direction. When elec-
ness of objects, which she brings into tricity is supplied to the coils attached to the
balance by deploying their own weight or outside of the tumblers it creates a temporary
counterweights. Though, at first glance, magnetic field that draws the needles to the
her works are perceived as purely aesthetic, coils. And the faint sound of the needles
artistic objects, it soon dawns on those who hitting the glass resonates in the space all
behold them that these constructions are the around.
result of elaborate mathematical and physical
calculations, mechanisms, solutions, and Acoustic levitation is the secret behind
interventions. María Ignacia Edwards calls Lapillus Bug by the three Japanese artists
these pieces self-sustainable because they Yasuaki Kakehi, Takayuki Hoshi, and Kono
require no more than their own weight to Michinari. Similar to a fruit fly, Lapillus
exist, and the objects tend to rotate constantly Bug flits about over the table, interacts with
around their own axis. people, and reacts to light and motion. But
here’s the interesting part—it’s just a Styrofoam
Chijikinkutsu by Nelo Akamatsu (JP) is a particle kept aloft by sonic waves out of the
coinage, combining two Japanese words: range of human hearing. Ultra-low frequencies
“Chijiki” means geomagnetism. It is about produce standing waves that let the little
terrestrial magnetic properties that have bug hover—thanks to a phenomenon called
always existed and affect everything on earth, acoustic levitation. The point of this work is
even though they cannot be perceived by the to breathe life into an inanimate object by
human senses. A “suikinkutsu” is a sound means of external forces.

Nelo Akamatsu (JP) creates art works across several media such as installations with electric devices,
event installations, video installations, sculptures, paintings, and photos. He has an MFA from the
Department of Intermedia Art, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, 2005. Golden Nica
of Prix Ars Electronica (2015), Taro Okamoto Award of Contemporary Art (prize 2004, 2014), solo exhibition
at the Italian Embassy in Tokyo (2009), joint exhibition at Bauhaus University in Weimar (2004).
www.neloakamatsu.jp
María Ignacia Edwards (CL). The artist’s work has its origin in her efforts to be an active observer of
the world, investigating different phenomena and the relationship to human beings. Her work has been
exhibited in Chile and internationally. She received the “Art for Science” award from the National
Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT) in Santiago, Chile. She was the first
artist in residency in the framework of the European Art and Science Network. www.aec.at/artandscience
Yasuaki Kakehi (JP) is a media artist and an interactive media researcher. He works at Keio University and
MIT Media Lab. His works have been exhibited at a lot of exhibitions including ACM SIGGRAPH and Ars
Electronica Festival. He developed the Lapillus Bug with Michinari Kono, who is a PhD student at the
University of Tokyo. This art piece is based on an ultrasound-based non-contact actuator developed
by Takayuki Hoshi, who is an assistant professor at Nagoya Institute of Technology.
www.xlab.sfc.keio.ac.jp/~kakehi/

245
Visualization Lab

Sergio Redruello/LABoral
Fifty Sisters, Jon McCormack

Besides the fact that the artists in the DataLab Jon McCormack’s Fifty Sisters are the
have a very strong relationship to the visualiza- counterparts of Cornelia Hesse-Honegger’s
tion of their data, we wanted to focus here on handmade drawings. Since the late 1980s
the diversity of visualization processes, in McCormack has worked with computer code
particular when it comes to the question of as a medium for creative expression. Inspired
visualizing scientific topics and the socio- by the complexity and wonder of a diminishing
political impact of visualizing data, as well as natural world, his work is concerned with
the artist as subjective interpreter. electronic “post-natures”—alternate forms
Since 1968, scientist-artist Cornelia Hesse- of artificial life that may one day replace the
Honegger (CH) has been painting pictures biological nature lost through human progress
of flies and other bugs that have mutated as and development. Fictional visualization is also
a result of environmental contamination and practiced by the artist Nick Ervinck, who was
atomic radiation. Since the Chernobyl melt- presented earlier within the context of the
down in 1986, she has collected more than FabLab. At first sight his 3D printed objects
16,000 insects in the fallout zones of look as if they have been made for medical
Chernobyl and nuclear facilities in Asia, research, however, as soon as you understand
Europe, and the US under the title of that his work is not about existing bodies,
Seh-Forschung (Vision Research). She calls you start imagining the creatures behind the
her approach “knowledge-art” and is still objects on display.
continuing her work on it. In October 2015,
she received the Nuclear Free Future Award
in the category education.

246
Jon McCormack (AU), electronic media artist and academic, works since the late 1980s with computer code as a
medium for artistic expression. He holds degrees in Applied Mathematics and Visual Art, and a PhD in Computer
Science. His work is concerned with electronic ‘after natures’—alternate forms of Artificial Life that may one day
replace the biological nature lost through human progress and development. The monograph Impossible Nature:
the art of Jon McCormack (2005) documents his creative achievements and reflects on the inherent
philosophical and creative ideas. He is currently research professor at Monash University, Melbourne.
jonmccormack.info
Cornelia Hesse-Honegger (CH), born 1944 in Zurich. Zurich School of Applied Art then 25 years as a scientific
illustrator apprentice, Zoological Museum, University of Zurich. After Chernobyl, study of leaf bugs and plants
near nuclear power plants in Sweden, Ticino, Switzerland (1989), and Chernobyl, Ukraine. Articles published on
deformed leaf bugs and Drosophila flies, study of leaf bugs’ health near reprocessing plants Sellafield, UK (1989),
La Hague, France (1999), and nuclear power plants Three Mile Island and Peach Bottom Plant, Pennsylvania, US
(1991) as well as Krümmel and Stade (1995), and Gundremmingen in Germany (2002). Further leaf bug studies
near nuclear test areas In Nevada and Utah (1997) and Hanford (1998). 1992–1999 After Chernobyl exhibition in
Europe and Canada. Since 1994 cooperation with Locus+, UK, organizers of The Future’s Mirror exhibition and
book. Publication of Heteroptera (1998, German, 2003, English version). Successful collaboration with silk
manufacturer Fabric Frontline, Zurich, from 1986 that financed all her research. www.wissenskunst.ch

Fifty Sisters, Jon McCormack

Seh-Forschung , Cornelia Hesse-Honegger

247
Econodos. Transferencias, Las artes, las ciencias y las nuevas formas de lo
local, 2015. lmagen del King’s American Dispensatory, 1898

Philosophy Lab
While the labs depicted so far have had The excursive project Transferences – Arts,
primarily to do with practices, methods, and Sciences and New Forms of the Local by
processes in art and science, we want to Lorena Lozano (ES) puts forward the idea of
conclude by discussing the role of the artist/ the plurality of the arts and sciences, and the
scientist/citizen, and robot or machine. need to generate collaborative processes
Confronted with the situation that machines of knowledge transference to strengthen
are assuming ever more responsibilities, we common knowledge. This laboratory is an
need to recognize that it is still we humans open office, a participatory and propositional
who have to program them, and to code place for active listening and rethinking the
algorithms based on our experiences and role of artists and researchers. The activities
knowledge. But what if in complex situations in this lab develop in six open encounters
machines have to decide between life and that include presentations, interviews, and
death? Or whether to help others or them- debates.
selves? Or to aid an old person or a child?
What does responsibility during scientific or
artistic processes mean within the context
of technological developments?

248
In addition to Lozano’s excursive project, can use new technologies to modify and
Patricia Piccinini presented The Listener. This reform the creatures of nature, in which the
humanoid figure that her crew painstakingly diversity of life has reached a new stage, and
put together out of silicon, fiberglass, and in which new possibilities of synthetic biology
human hair doesn’t seem the least bit threat- bring forth more questions than answers, we
ening. Actually, its vulnerability is what leaves mustn’t lose our capacity for empathy. And so
the strongest impression. With a friendly look the question arises: Can a code for empathy
on its face, it seems to be seeking acceptance be written for a machine and, if so, what
and hoping that we are not put off by its challenges will we have to face in the future?
strangeness. In a world in which human beings

Lorena Lozano (ES) is an artist and researcher, PhD from University of Oviedo, (Spain, 2017), graduated in Fine
Art (Glasgow School of Art, Scotland, 2007) and Biological Sciences (University of Oviedo, 1998). Her research
connects knowledge and methodologies from art and from science. She is a founding member of ecoLAB, an
experimental laboratory in Art, Ecology and Open Electronics (LABoral Centro de Arte 2011-12); and a co-founder
of Econodos – an Ecology and Communication platform. lorenalozano.net

Patricia Piccinini (AU) is a multidisciplinary artist who works painting, video, sound, installations, digital printing,
and sculpture. Considered one of the most important Australian creators of their time, in 2014 was awarded the
Artist Awards Melbourne Art Foundation’s Awards for the Visual Arts. www.patriciapiccinini.net
Sergio Redruello/LABoral

The Listener, Patricia Piccinini, 2012

249
Monsters of the Machine
Exhibition
21.09.2017 – 13.01.2018

Monsters of the Machine is a contemporary take on Mary Shelley’s


Frankenstein and asks us to reconsider her warning, that scientific
imagining and all technologies have unintended and dramatic
consequences for the world.
Curated by Marc Garrett, co-director of Furtherfield.org

Monsters of the Machine


Frankenstein in the 21st Century
Monsters of the Machine is a contemporary In this exhibition, visitors experience artworks
take on Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein that asks in which the human genome is used as the
us to reconsider her warning that scientific basis for a poetry machine that plays back a
imaginings and all technologies have self-assembling video montage spanning the
unintended and dramatic consequences for thirteen years it took to complete the first
the world. It also invites us to ask the same documented human DNA sequence in the
questions about the arts and human Human Genome Project. It is both a memorial
imagination. Shelley’s classic gothic novel to and an algorithmic visualization of a historic
was written 200 years ago in 1816 and scientific landmark. 3D printed avatars,
published anonymously in London in 1818. representing bodies distorted in pain in
Dr. Frankenstein plays the role of the relation to virtual worlds, where there‘s no
Promethean scientist, a creative genius and geography and the result is the crack / wound,
a narcissist, who is tangled up in his own everywhere and nowhere. Visitors participate
individual desires and exploits others in an in a software-driven installation, a performative
irresponsible and abusive drive to control social neuroscience experiment to discover
nature. But who is the real monster? our shared psychological biases. A surreal
Dr. Frankenstein or the poor wretched mutant video installation shows us a dystopian blend
he brought to life? And are we Dr. Franken- of “reality” out in the remote Australian desert
stein, or the suffering mutant, or both? The with traditional ghost stories and dreamtime
questions raised in the exhibition consider stories, mixed with science fiction. The Sahara
the roles of our arts and science traditions Desert is remapped by a custom bot in an
and examine other issues of everyday life as algorithmically scripted performance,
they are played out in the Anthropocene, such traversing the data-scape of Google Maps and
as climate change, gender politics, ethics, filling a Tumblr blog and its data centers.
governance, surveillance, posthumanism, Artists take our bio-matter and the inconceiv-
transhumanism, hacking, biohacking, able quantities of data that we generate in our
colonialism, neoliberalism, biopolitics, and daily lives as materials with an inherent
accelerationism. recombinant intelligence and the power to

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generate (without the intervention of human and Prism, we’ve experienced new formula-
will) the narratives of human destiny and more. tions of mutual surveillance and manipulation
Do we inhabit our own bodies anymore, or do everyday. So now we stand on the edge of a
we share our body materials out for others to precipice: What choice do we have but to
measure, reshape, and construct, data-scrape jump into this sea of dysfunctional dystopias,
and manage remotely? Arthur Kroker in Body and to directly observe for ourselves what we
Drift: Butler, Hayles, Haraway says that, “we no have become and what we will be—the
longer inhabit a body in any meaningful sense Monsters of the Machine.
of the term but rather occupy a multiplicity of
bodies—imaginary, sexualized, disciplined, Source: http://www.laboralcentrodearte.org/en/
exposiciones/monsters-of-the-machine
gendered, laboring technologically augment-
ed bodies.” 1,2 The exhibition draws upon ideas from Marc Garrett’s
Artists and scientists work with the same tools, essay “Prometheus 2.0: Frankenstein Conquers
frameworks, and archetypes. There are the World!”. http://www.furtherfield.org/features/
crossovers, it’s no surprise that we find the prometheus-20-and-our-god-complex
boundaries of imaginative fantasy and
objective reality breaking down. Take for
1 Kroker, Arthur (2012). Body Drift: Butler, Hayles,
instance, the jellyfish invasions around nuclear
Haraway (Posthumanities). University of Minnesota
reactors in Japan, Israel, Sweden, and the Press: Minnesota.
Scottish plant in Torness. The natural world is 2 See Garrett, Marc (15.08.2015). “Body Drift:
writing its own science fiction into a new Butler, Hayles and Haraway.” Review.
reality, with vivid images and outlandish http://www.furtherfield.org/features/reviews/
outcomes. Right now, the classic techno-utopi- body-drift-butler-hayles-and-haraway
an dream of computers liberating us all and
providing the tools that will underpin global
democratization, seem a long way off and even
somewhat sterile. Since the news stories broke
of mass surveillance of Internet users by NSA

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Equipo Sauti ya wakulima
Sauti ya wakulima, 2011
Interactive installation

Sauti ya wakulima proposes that agricultural knowledge, shared and defended as a


common good, can help farmers to resist the onslaught of climate change. Since
2011, Sauti ya wakulima has invited groups of farmers who live and work in Tanzania
to produce and share audiovisual records of their daily practices. By means of
smartphones and a website, the participants documented and published their
knowledge about techniques of adaptation to climate changes, their needs and
aspirations, on the Internet. All this reinforced the mutual support networks that
can help them in times of adversity.
Original participants: Abdallah Jumanne, Mwinyimvua Mohamedi, Fatuma Ngomero, Rehema
Maganga, Haeshi Shabani, Renada Msaki, Hamisi Rajabu, Ali Isha Salum, Imani Mlooka, Sina Rafael
Coordinator: Hamza Suleyman
Scientific counsel: Angelika Hilbeck (ETH Zurich), Flora Ismail (University of Dar es Salaam)
Direction & programming: Eugenio Tisselli

Eugenio Tiselli (Equipo Sauti ya wakulima) (MX), 1972, is an artist and computer systems
engineer with a doctorate from Plymouth University. He is currently directing the project ojoVoz,
an open source platform for the creation of community memories. As part of ojoVoz, he has held
extended workshops with peasant farmers in Tanzania and Mexico, in which the participants
have been involved in different dynamics of collaborative writing. ojovoz.net.

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Mary Flanagan (US)


Help me Know the Truth, 2016
Interactive software

Help me Know the Truth is a participatory artwork in which visitors to the exhibition
become a part of the work across the gallery. Participants first snap a digital
portrait at a small photo booth at the entrance to the show. In front of the
installation, they can choose between two slightly altered portraits to match the
text label shown on the screen. By selecting the slight variations of images over
time, differing facial features emerge that reveal larger unconscious beliefs about
facial features or tendencies related to culture and identity. The intent behind the
work is to both utilize and question how computational techniques can uncover the
categorizing systems of the mind, and how they are therefore subject to socially
constructed fears and values.
Courtesy: Mary Flanagan
Acknowledgements: Jared Segal

Mary Flanagan (US). Her work explores the anxious and profound relationship between
technological systems and human experience, with a focus on games, play, emotion, and deeply
held unconscious biases. Her artwork ranges from game-based systems to computer viruses,
embodied interfaces to interactive texts; these works have been exhibited internationally.
Flanagan’s approach to games and technological systems occupy both onscreen space as well
as move away from the screen to push reflection on familiar relationships to play, politics, and
the personal. maryflanagan.com

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Fernando Gutiérrez (ES)
The Brain of the Planet, 2016
Site-specific graphic intervention

The Brain of the Planet presents an army of dysfunctional bionic creatures within a
retrofuturist, dystopic aesthetic. The project offers a romantic, B-movie paleofuture,
the future that was imagined in the past, which is playful, ironic, and profoundly
emotional. The project is based on the Weird Menace aesthetic of pulp fiction
classics from the early decades of the twentieth century, when the pioneers of
science fiction—the heirs of Mary Shelley—expressed fears that machines would
rebel against their creators and imagined lost lands and remote worlds. The piece
explores the relationship between man and machine and asks questions about the
problems of our identity in relation to current bio-technological experiments and
genetically malleable machines.
Produced by: LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial

Fernando Gutiérrez (ES) holds a BA in Fine Arts from the University of Salamanca and has devel-
oped most of his artistic activity from pictorial premises. His production has revolved around
drawing, which he chose to recover for its simplicity and immediacy, experimenting with different
procedures and techniques that ultimately incorporate collage as a working process and anima-
tion as a visual support. www.fernandogutierrez.es

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Lynn Hershman Leeson (US)


Infinity Engine, 2013-2014
Installation

Lynn Hershman Leeson asks us to “imagine a world in which there is a blurring


between the soul and the chip, a world where artificially implanted DNA is
genetically bred to create enlightened and self-replicating intelligent machines,
which perhaps use a body as a vehicle for mobility.”
(Hershman Leeson, Lynn, Civic Radar, 2016, Hatje Cantz, p. 331)
Infinity Engine examines these critical issues which cross between reality, fear, and
fantasy. Through the wallpaper, the installation replicates some of the
paraphernalia found in genetics labs, as well as hybrid animals and plants whose
patent is legally owned by bio-companies involving genetic engineering. This
installation is part of a project that has been exhibited around the world. It was
(partially) commissioned by ZKM, Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, and it
questions the ethics of the biotechnology industry.
Loan: ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe

Lynn Hershman Leeson (US). Over the last five decades, artist and filmmaker Lynn Hershman
Leeson has received international acclaim for her art and films. She is recognized for her
innovative work investigating issues that are now recognized as key to the workings of society:
the relationship between humans and technology, identity, surveillance, and the use of media as
a tool of empowerment against censorship and political repression.
www.lynnhershman.com

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Shu Lea Cheang (CN)
UKI viral love, 2013
Installation

UKI viral love is the sequel to Cheang’s acclaimed cyberpunk movie I.K.U. conceived
in two parts—a viral performance and a viral game. The story is about coders
dispatched by the Internet porn enterprise GENOM Corp, to collect human, orgasm
data, for consumption via a mobile phone plug-in. Deprived of data in a post-net
crash era, these coders are suddenly dumped in an e-trashscape environment
where hackers and coders are forced to scavenge through techno-waste. These
defunct replicants also seek parts and codes to resurrect themselves.
Performers: Radie Manssour, Maria Llopis
Photo: Rocio Campana
UKI viral love is part of the UK project developed with collaborations and residencies at: Hangar
media lab (Barcelona), Medialab Prado (Madrid), LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial
[Plataforma Cero] (Gijón,), Imaginarium (Tourcoing)
Installation in Gijón in collaboration with: EMULSA, Gijón

Shu Lea Cheang (CN) is an artist, filmmaker, and networker. She constructs networked
installations and multi-player performances in participatory impromptu mode and drafts sci-fi
narratives in her film scenarios and artwork imaginations. She builds social interface with
transgressive plots and open network that permits public participation. Since her relocation to
Eurozone in 2000, Cheang has taken up large scale installation and networked performance and
co-founded several collectives to pursue cross-disciplinary projects.
www.mauvaiscontact.info

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[AOS] Art is Open Source (IT)


La Cura: Everything , 2016
Generative video and cards

“In September 2012, artist Salvatore Iaconesi got the diagnosis. He had a glioma
(glial cell brain cancer) on the surface of his right hemisphere. Upon asking to see
all the data relating to his condition, he found that all of the documents, MRI scans
and so on, were in obscure, not readily used formats. This meant that if one wanted
to view the data, you needed specific or corporate software.” (Patrick Lichty, 2012).
The artists hacked all the files and uploaded them to the internet, looking for an
open source cure. La Cura is a global participatory performance that transforms
the meaning of the word “cure”—bringing it out of the separated spheres of
administration and bureaucracy, back into society.
Acknowledgements: Kilowatt Bologna
Collaborators: all the participants in La Cura, all over the world

AOS – Art is Open Source (IT) started in 2004 as an interdisciplinary research laboratory focused
on merging artistic and scientific practices to gain better understandings about the mutation of
human beings and their societies with the advent of ubiquitous technologies. AOS was created
by Salvatore Iaconesi (engineer, hacker, artist, designer, TED Fellow, Eisenhower Fellow, Yale
World Fellow, and professor in Interaction Design at ISIA Design University in Florence) and
Oriana Persico (social scientist and artist) and now includes more than 200 artists and
researchers from across the world. www.artisopensource.net

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Regina de Miguel (ES)


Una historia nunca contada desde abajo, 2016
HD video and 3D animation

The starting point is one of the most radical and unusual cases in the recent history
of communication technologies, the project Cybersyn or Synco. This project, which
was directed by the cybernetic visionary, Stafford Beer, was set up in Chile between
1971 and 1973 during the government of President Salvador Allende. It came to an
abrupt end as a result of the coup led by Augusto Pinochet. Based on the story of
the Freedom Machine, which proposed to “deliver the tools of science to the
people,” and other paradigmatic scenarios linked to the notion of disappearance
and buried knowledge, the result is a filmic narrative, divided into acts, combining
elements of the historical documentary, science/political fiction, and psychological
portrait.
Film produced thanks to the Grants for Video Art Creation of Fundación BBVA

Regina de Miguel (ES) is an artist who acts as a critical, interdisciplinary agent in processes and
confluences orientated towards the production of hybrid objects and knowledge. Some of her
projects deal with strategies for the formation of desire and its visualization as a psychosocial
landscape. In the same vein, she also analyses the speculative, fictional boundary contained
within scientific and cultural objects. cargocollective.com/reginademiguel

258
Carla Gannis (US)
The Garden of Emoji Delights, 2014
Digital C-print and video

In The Garden of Emoji Delights, the artist


creates a mash between popular historic and
contemporary sign systems, and expands the
Emoji lexicon through this process. Emoji are a
contemporary glyph system, which offer
shorthand for virtual expression. The

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pleasurable stylizations are ubiquitous
worldwide and across generations. Translating
iconography of an earlier era by using Emoji
seems to makes perfect “nonsense sense” to
her. The artist produced both a 2D print and
moving image version of the “emojified
garden.” The static work is a direct homage to
Carla Gannis (US) identifies as a visual storyteller. Bosch—deeply tied in scale and physicality to
With the use of 21st century representational the original. The moving image version
technologies she narrates through a digital looking allowed Gannis to be more dynamic with a
glass where reflections on power, sexuality,
hybrid visual vocabulary.
marginalization, and agency emerge. She is fascinated
by digital semiotics and the situation of identity in the Courtesy: Carla Gannis & TRANSFER Gallery
blurring contexts of physical and virtual.
carlagannis.com

Joana Moll (ES) & Cédric Parizot (FR)


The Virtual Watchers, 2016
Website

The Virtual Watchers is an on-going research


project existing at the intersection of art,
research and technology. It questions the
dynamics of crowdsourcing, national security
and border control, through social media. It
focuses on the exchanges that occurred within
a Facebook group that gathered American
volunteers ready to monitor US-Mexico border
through an online platform that displayed live
screenings of CCTV cameras, in real-time. The
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declared aim of this operation was to get


American citizens to participate in reducing
border crime and block the entrance of illegal
immigration to the US by means of
crowdsourcing.

Joana Moll (ES) is an artist and a researcher. Her work critically explores the way post-capitalist narratives affect
the alphabetization of machines, humans, and ecosystems. Her main research topics include Internet materiality,
surveillance, online tracking, critical interfaces, and language. www.janavirgin.com
Cédric Parizot (FR) is a researcher in anthropology at the Institute of Research and Studies of the Arab and
Muslim Worlds (CNRS/Aix Marseille University). He received his PhD, which focused on electoral processes
among the Negev Bedouin (Israel), in 2001 from the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris).
After this, he refocused his research on mobility and bordering mechanisms in the Israeli-Palestinian spaces.

259
Guido Segni (IT)
A quiet desert failure, 2015
Algorithmic performance, Website, Tumblr archive

This is an ongoing, online, real-time, algorithmic performance by


Guido Segni, started in 2013. In its own way, it’s a monumental piece
about internet contents, emptiness, time, storage, memory, oblivion,
and—ultimately—failure. The artist programmed an Internet bot, a
program that simulates a human activity, to traverse the data-scape
of Google Maps in order to fill a Tumblr blog and its data centers with
a remapped representation of the whole Sahara Desert, one post at a
time, every 30 minutes. The project is part of Data fillings, a series of
conceptual web-based works exploring the idea of filling both the

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surface and the physical references (the data centers) of the Internet
with (apparently?) worthless information.
Courtesy: Guido Segni
Collaborators: Fabio Angeli, Lorenzo Del Grande

Guido Segni (IT). With a background in Hacktivism, Net Art and Video Art, Guido Segni, aka Clemente Pestelli,
lives and works somewhere at the intersections between art, pop internet culture, and data hallucination. Mainly
focused on the daily (ab)use of Internet, his work is characterized by minimal gestures on technology which
combine conceptual approaches with a traditional hacker attitude in making things odd, useless and
dysfunctional. guidosegni.com

Avataurror 2012-2013
Alan Sondheim (US)
3D printed plastic

The word Avataurror is a remix combining avatar,


toro, and terror. This series of 3D-printed objects are
modified motion capture mappings, taken from
physical dance performances and outputs. The artist
is interested in distorted, wounded, problematic
avatars and their relationship to states of violence
and genocide. Sondheim’s works represent a kind of
un-utterability, where the reality of flesh and pain
dominates across any language and any form of
representation. How does one act, when whole
cultures are wiped out? How does one resist, when
resistance is accompanied by unbelievable pain?
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How does one exist in war zones, how does one


endure? As violence increases around the world,
these questions are paramount; we must continue in
spite of everything, we must learn to listen, to heal,
to calm, to persevere?

Alan Sondheim (US) is a Providence-based new media artist, musician, writer, and performer concerned with
issues of virtuality, and the stake that the real world has in the virtual. His current work is concerned with issues
of anguish online and off. Sondheim is interested in examining the grounds of the virtual and how the body is
inhabited. He performs in virtual, real, and cross-over worlds; his virtual work is known for its highly complex
avatars and avatar distortions. www.alansondheim.org

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Thomson & Craighead (UK)


Stutterer, 2014
Two-channel moving images, generative software

Stutterer is a poetry machine that uses the human genome like a music score to
play back a self-assembling video montage spanning the 13 years it took the Human
Genome Project to complete the first documented human DNA sequence. The four
nucleotide bases of a DNA strand are represented by letters and Stutterer plays (or
would play—if it were to run continuously for more than 80 years) all 3.2 billion
letters representing the human genome.
Stutterer is a human monument of sorts, which seeks to connect our biological
fabric with our unique linguistic abilities.
Programming: Matt Jarvis
Commissioned by LifeSpace Science Art Research Gallery with support from The Wellcome Trust
On loan: University of Dundee Museum Services

Thomson & Craighead (UK) have shown extensively at galleries, film festivals, and for
site-specific commissions in the UK and internationally. Much of their recent work looks at
networked global communications systems and how they are changing the way we all
understand the world around us.

261
Genetic Moo (UK)
Animacules, 2009
A dark and interactive sea of wiggling,
luminescent creatures that gorge on torchlight.

Animacules was inspired by the 19th century


sea life illustrations of Ernst Haeckel and the
work of the 17th century Dutch scientist
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek who invented one
of the earliest microscopes. Leeuwenhoek was
the first to describe what we now know to be
micro-organisms as living molecules, which he
christened “animalcules.” Genetic Moo
presents a swarm of fanciful small creatures
whose body shapes recall the microscopic life
of the sea, ponds, and saliva. This interactive
installation belongs to a series of works that

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explores the theme of an imagined future
involving human evolution and it playfully
considers alternative propositions of body and
mini-molecule combinations to the
cerebro-centric norm.

Genetic Moo (UK) creates playful interactive art using open source software and a range of low-tech
sensors, including webcams, microphones, and Kinect. Their work draws widely from science, particularly
in the areas of evolution, mutation, and artificial life. Since 2008, they have been building a digital bestiary
based on “imagined future evolutions,” where human development is driven by sensual rather than
cerebral influences. www.geneticmoo.com

Karolina Sobecka (PL)


Medusa FPS, 2016
Computer game

A First Person Shooter game in which the gun


is a AI-aided robotic weapon that helps to
determine when to shoot, fires automatically
on its field of view, and guides the player’s
hand to aim more effectively. The player
cannot drop the weapon or stop it from firing,
but he/she can obstruct it (and the gun’s)
vision. The object of the game is to shoot as
few people as possible. This game is a
reflection on the intelligent robotic weapon
systems the military is using in order to
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distribute agency between a team of men, the


algorithm, and the machine, Thus, the
accountability remains scattered across a
complex concatenation of human and
non-human actors.

Karolina Sobecka (PL) is an artist and a designer. Her recent projects focus on techno-optimism as a way of inves-
tigating the values that drive technological innovation and shape the philosophy that inscribes humans in nature.
Karolina’s work has been shown internationally and has received numerous awards. www.gravitytrap.com

262
Gretta Louw (AU/DE)
Colonise the Cloud, 2016
Video

This series of animated GIFs unpacks the


incredibly cynical, manipulative marketing
around the so-called “cloud”; the way that the
language and images used to describe the
service imply an ethereal data-heaven
disembodied, pure, and safe. The reality is
everything that its depiction is not. In this
series, the jellyfish—one of the few sea
creatures that seems to benefit from the

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pollution that human industry spreads through
the oceans—becomes symbolic of the
amorphous, inscrutable network, the cloud
that seems to be one thing but reveals itself,
upon closer inspection, to be another.

Gretta Louw & Warnayaka Art Centre


Future Present Desert, 2016
Video installation

This work is a new single channel video


installation, including physical elements, made
on location in Lajamanu, a Warlpiri community
in central Australia. The piece is a surreal,
dystopian blend of “reality”, traditional ghost
and dreamtime stories, personal experiences
of the Warlpiri artists, and science fiction.
There is an investigation of the ways in which
culture and technology intertwine and how
technology is appropriated by marginalized
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communities and used for their own purposes.


Coproduced: LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Indus-
trial & Warnayaka Art Centre
Acknowledgements: the Lajamanu community and Laja-
manu elders, the traditional land owners, the Warnayaka
Art and Cultural Aboriginal Corporation

Gretta Louw (AU/DE) was born in South Africa but grew up in Australia; she received her BA in 2001 from the
University of Western Australia and Honours in Psychology in 2002, subsequently living in Japan and New
Zealand before moving to Germany in 2007. In 2012, she released her first book, Controlling_Connectivity:
Art, Psychology, and the Internet (a limited edition artist’s book about her durational online performance of
the same name), followed in 2013 by Warnayaka Art Centre: Art in the Digital Desert, and in 2014 her first
catalogue, Works / Arbeiten 2011–2014.

263
Science Gallery
at Trinity College Dublin

264
Since 2008, Science Gallery at Trinity College allow visitors to participate, facilitating social
Dublin has steered its mission to ignite connections, providing an element of surprise,
creativity and discovery where science and and provoking questions to find new ways
art collide, acting as a porous, creative mem- to think about big global challenges. This is
brane between the university and the wider supported by events and education pro-
community. We achieve this by encouraging gramming as well as off-site activities,
our audience to discover, express, and including those of our makerspace,
pursue their passions through an ever- MAKESHOP.
changing program of exhibitions, events, In 2012, Science Gallery International launched
and experiences, all vividly brought together as an independent non-profit, aiming to create
at this dynamic, creative intersection. the world’s first university-linked network
The cutting-edge program at Science Gallery dedicated to public engagement with science
Dublin encourages young people aged 15 to and art. Their work is the activation and
25 to learn through their interests. Since its expansion of a vision to catalyze the creation
opening, nearly 3 million visitors to the gallery of the world’s leading network for involving,
have experienced more than 40 unique inspiring, and transforming curious minds
exhibitions, ranging from living art through science. The galleries, pop-up
experiments to artificial intelligence and from programs, and touring exhibitions of the
the future of the human race to the future of Global Science Gallery Network are founded
play. Our programs are fuelled by the expertise on the belief that young people hold the
of scientists, researchers, students, artists, creative potential to tackle the world’s biggest
designers, inventors, creative thinkers, challenges. The Network has already reached
visionaries, entrepreneurs, and more. Our millions of 15- to 25-year-olds worldwide. In
exhibitions are primarily curated through an addition to Science Gallery Dublin, galleries
open call, supplemented by invited and and programs are currently in development at
commissioned work. The work is then Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, King’s College
communicated by our staff on the floor, who London, Indian Institute of Science in
are mediators in the same age bracket as our Bengaluru, Michigan State University, and the
target audience. They act as the public face University of Melbourne.
of the gallery, expanding on the content and
dublin.sciencegallery.com
allowing for peer-to-peer contact. The focus
@SciGalleryDub
is on providing compelling experiences that

265
Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
Activities

Exhibitions Cardboard Robots, Makey Makey, Soldering


(Educational workshop – science)
TRAUMA Science Gallery Dublin
Exhibition Spring 2017 (multiple dates)
Science Gallery Dublin Cardboard Robots, Makey Makey, Soldering
20.11.2015 – 21.02.2016 MAKESHOP
See Page 266
AI App Workshop (Educational workshop – tech)
SEEING Science Gallery Dublin
Exhibition Spring 2017 (multiple dates)
Science Gallery Dublin AI App Workshop
24.06. – 25.09.2016 Domhnall O‘Hanlon, The Robot Foundry
See Page 267
Educational workshop – science
HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY Irish Film Institute
Exhibition 25.11.2015
Science Gallery Dublin TRAUMA and Neuroscience
10.02. – 21.05.2017 Professor Orla Hardiman,
See Page 286 Dr. Caroline Jagoe & Lesley Doyle

SOUND CHECK
Exhibition Events & Artist Talks
Science Gallery Dublin
09.06. – 24.09.2017 DESIGN AND VIOLENCE: After Dark
See Page 298 Event
Science Gallery Dublin
18.11.2016
Workshop Train of Thought
Aoife Van Linden Tol (artist) & Gabrielle Sellen
Educational workshop – art (workshop assistant)
Science Gallery Dublin
15.10.2015 An Automation Too Far?
Human body textile design workshop A Debate on AI-created Art
Eimear Kinsella Debate
Science Gallery Dublin
Train of Thought 10.02.2017
(Educational workshop – art) An Automation Too Far?
Science Gallery Dublin A Debate on AI-created Art
19.11.2016 Ross Goodwin & William Myers
Train of Thought
Aoife Van Linden Tol (artist) &
Gabrielle Sellen (workshop assistant)

266
Byte-Sized Talks – Humans Need Not Apply SEEING: The Curators‘ Perspective
Curators/Artists Talks Curators/Artists Talks
Science Gallery Dublin Science Gallery Dublin
10.02.2017 14.07.2016
Byte-Sized Talks - Humans Need Not Apply SEEING: The Curators‘ Perspective
Saron Paz & Zvika Markfeld; Adam Ben-Dror & Gerry Lacey, Kate Coleman
Shanshan Zhou; William Myers; Ross Goodwin;
Libby Heaney; Radames Anja “Copyright or Wrong?”
Curators/Artists Talks
Towards an Automated Future: Meet the Science Gallery Dublin
Humans Curating Humans Need Not Apply 23.07.2015
Curators/Artists Talks “Copyright or Wrong?”
Science Gallery Dublin Nicolas Maigret (Pirate Cinema), Professor Eoin
08.09.2016 O‘Dell, TCD School of Law, Professor Linda Doyle,
Towards an Automated Future: Meet the Director of CONNECT, CTVR and Professor of
Humans Curating Humans Need Not Apply Engineering and the Arts, Zack Denfeld
William Myers, Amber Case, Damien Henry, (CoClimate and Centre for Genomic Gastronomy)
Lynn Scarff
Why Torture Doesn‘t Work:
SEEING: BEHIND THE SCENES The Neuroscience of Interrogation
Curators/Artists Talks Curators/Artists Talks
Science Gallery Dublin Science Gallery Dublin
24.06.2016 14.12.2015
SEEING BEHIND THE SCENES Why Torture Doesn‘t Work:
Dianne Boz, Roxana Vazquez, Shannon The Neuroscience of Interrogation
McMullen and Rachel McDonnell  Professor Shane O‘Mara (Curator), Richard
English, Provost & President of Trinity College
SEEING LAUNCH PARTY Dublin, Patrick Prendergast
Event including curators/artists talks Science
Gallery Dublin
23.06.2016
SEEING LAUNCH PARTY
Gerry Lacey, Kate Coleman, Lynn Scarff

HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY LAUNCH PARTY


Event including curators/artists talks
Science Gallery Dublin
09.02.2017
HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY LAUNCH PARTY
William Myers, Amber Case, Damien Henry,
Lynn Scarff

267
TRAUMA—Built to break
A free exhibition exploring the boundary of rupture and recovery
Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
20.11.2015 – 21.02.2016

How does trauma affect the brain, the body, the national psyche, or
all three? How do buildings, bodies, artworks, and stories record the
traumas of our past? How do we bounce back after a trauma, and
how is our understanding of trauma’s lasting effect changing?
23.11.02 24.11.02 25.11.02 26.11.02 27.11.02 28.11.02 29.11.02 30.11.02 01.12.02 02.12.02 03.12.02 04.12.02 05.12.02 06.12.02 07.12.02 08.12.02 09.12.02 10.12.02 11.12.02 12.12.02 13.12.02 14.12.02 15.12.02 16.12.02 17.12.02 18.12.02 19.12.02 20.12.02 21.12.02 22.12.02 23.12.02 24.12.02 25.12.02 26.12.02 27.12.02 28.12.02 29.12.02 30.12.02 31.12.02 01.01.03 02.01.03 03.01.03 04.01.03 05.01.03 06.01.03 07.01.03 08.01.03 09.01.03 10.01.03 11.01.03
0:00 0:00

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nial of opportunities to pray and the forced
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g other examples)

24:00 24:00

Shane O‘Mara, Stefanie Posavec (IE, US)


The Interrogation of Detainee 063
The piece is a collaborative project developed but on closer inspection the darker side of the
by Shane O’Mara, Professor of Experimental piece comes into focus with color-coding
Brain Research at Trinity College Dublin, showing the duration of different aspects of
Director of the Trinity College Institute of interrogation punctuated by feeding, sleep
Neuroscience, TRAUMA co-curator, and and bathroom breaks. Over 101,000 visitors
designer and self-professed data junkie visited the TRAUMA exhibition. The piece was
Stefanie Posavec. The piece is based on the reviewed together with TRAUMA in an edition
log detainee063.com, and visualizes 50 days of Nature. This piece was also discussed in a
(23.11.2002 – 11.01.2003) of the interrogation linked public event with Professor O’Mara
of prisoner Mohammed Mana Ahmed called Why Torture Doesn’t Work: The
al-Qahtani at the Guantanamo Bay detention Neuroscience of Interrogation, which was
camp. Viewed from a distance, the pastel attended by over 120 people.
colors and pattern are pleasant and welcoming

Shane O’Mara (IE) Shane is Professor of Experimental Brain Research at Trinity College Dublin, and Principal
Investigator and Director of the Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience. He is a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin
(FTCD), was the first Ireland-based elected Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science (FAPS), and is an
elected member of the Royal Irish Academy (MRIA).
Stefanie Posavec (US) is a designer, and data is her favored medium. She tends to work with data projects that
involve language, literature, or science (or all of these at once). Many of these projects represent data using a
hand-crafted approach. Besides data visualization/illustration/art, she occasionally designs books.

268
SEEING—What are you looking at?
A free exhibition questioning how eyes, brains, and robots see
Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
24.06.—25.09.2016

Is vision just one way to see? How do our brains interpret what’s in front of our eyes? How do
machines understand what they’re looking at, and will they change how we look at the world?
In summer 2016, at Science Gallery Dublin we tackled the complex sensory experience of vision
and perception at SEEING. We illuminated optics, perspective, and comprehension while
exploring enhanced and augmented ways of seeing, artificial eyes, and radical alternatives to
vision. SEEING explored the subjectivity of sight, the other senses that shape our view of the
world, and the unexpected parallels between human and machine vision.
(Source https://dublin.sciencegallery.com/seeing/about.html)
SEEING curated by: Lynn Scarff, Director of Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin; Gerry Lacey, Associate
Professor of Computer Science at Trinity College Dublin, CEO and co-founder of SureWash; Semir Zeki,
Professor of Neuroaesthetics at University College London; Kate Coleman, Consultant Eye and Oculoplastic
Surgeon, Founder of Right to Sight

Amir Amedi and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (IL)


EyeCane, 2010
Unobtrusive mobility aid for blind people

How can we sense distant objects without


vision? This question led to the development
of the EyeCane, a lightweight, finger-sized,
low-cost virtual cane. The EyeCane operates
as a kind of virtual flashlight, replacing or
strengthening the familiar white cane. The
device uses infrared sensors to estimate the
distance between the user and the object at
which it is pointing. This information
undergoes a “sensory transformation” and
becomes vibrations, which are sent to the
user’s hand via the device. The closer the user
is to an object, the stronger the vibration. This
allows people who are blind or who have a them, and create a spatial picture through
visual impairment to identify obstacles of which they can navigate safely. The device is
different heights, understand the distance intuitive, and its application can be taught
between themselves and the objects around within a few minutes.

Amir Amedi (IL) is an internationally acclaimed brain scientist with fifteen years of experience in the field of
brain plasticity and multisensory integration. He has a particular interest in visual rehabilitation. He is
Associate Professor at the Department of Medical Neurobiology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and
The Edmond & Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences. He is also Adjoint Research Professor at Paris-Sorbonne
University and the Vision Institute in Paris. He holds a PhD in Computational Neuroscience from the Inter-
disciplinary Center for Neural Computation at Hebrew University and is a Postdoctoral Fellow and Instructor
of Neurology at Harvard Medical School. brainvisionrehab.com

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Patrick Tresset (FR)
3RNP, 2014
A human model is drawn by three robots
named Paul

3RNP—or 3 Robots Named Paul—is a theatrical


robotic installation where the human becomes
a model. In a scene reminiscent of a life
drawing class, the human takes the sitter’s role
and is sketched by three robots, drawing
obsessively. Their bodies are old school desks.
The drawing sessions last up to forty minutes,
during which time the human cannot see the
drawings in progress. The sitter only sees the
robots alternating between observing and
drawing, sometimes pausing between the two.
The sounds produced by each robot’s motors
create an improvised soundtrack.
As the model in a life drawing class, the human
is personality-less, an object of study. The
human sitter is passive, the robots taking what
is perceived as the artistic role. Visitors to
Science Gallery Dublin could sit for the robots
Science Gallery Dublin

Science Gallery Dublin


and then receive a digital version of their
portraits. Does a computer see you the way
you see yourself?

Patrick Tresset (FR) creates theatrical installations with robotic agents as actors or cybernetic evocations of
humanness. Patrick’s installations use computational systems that aim to introduce artistic, expressive, and
obsessive aspects to robots’ behavior. patricktresset.com

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Andrea Russo (IT)
D-EYE, 2014
Smartphone-based retinal screening device

D-EYE is a sophisticated lens that attaches to a


smartphone and uses the light source and
camera of the phone to capture an image of
the back of the eye—the retina. It is a low-cost
and portable modern-day digital
ophthalmoscope, a device that allows you to
see the structures inside the eye. Healthcare
professionals use it as a screening tool to
examine the retinal wall for signs of health
issues.
The retina is a window to our health, and can
reveal diseases such as diabetes, glaucoma,
age-related macular degeneration,
hypertension, and melanomas or cancers.
According to the World Health Organization,
almost 300 million people in the world suffer
from vision loss, and 80% of those people
could have avoided losing their sight with
earlier intervention.
D-EYE can be used in rural or remote areas,
and retinal images can be transmitted via
cellular networks, connecting to a care team
wherever they may be. D-EYE is a pocket-sized
tele-health solution that could potentially help
millions of people worldwide.

Andrea Russo M.D. is an ophthalmologist in Brescia, Italy. He has authored and co-authored numerous
articles on clinical investigations of glaucoma and retinal diseases. Andrea received his medical degree
from University of Brescia, and served an observership at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London. He is the medical
advisor for D-EYE. d-eyecare.com

271
Science Gallery Dublin
Kurt Laurenz Theinert (DE)
Magical Colour Space, 2015
Experience your colour perception in a poetic way

You step into a room. The walls are made up of coloured stripes. Above you, red,
green and blue lights cycle through the spectrum of different colours. As the
lighting changes, the walls around you seem to throb and move.
Magical Colour Space looks at the basics of colour perception. When light hits an
object, the object absorbs some of the light wavelengths and reflects the rest. The
human eye and brain work together to translate this reflected light into colour. As
the light in Magical Colour Space slowly changes its proportions of red, green and
blue, the coloured stripes on the wall reflect only the wavelengths in their own
colour. Because the brain uses changes in light levels to help detect motion, this
creates the illusion that the walls are moving.

Kurt Laurenz Theinert (DE) is a photographer and light artist who concentrates his work on
visual experiences that do not refer, as images, to anything. Instead, he strives for an abstract,
reductive aesthetic, which has ultimately led him to switch from photography to light as a
medium. In his installations he creates dynamic light environments that transform the perception
of space. theinert-lichtkunst.de

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Science Gallery Dublin

David Cotterrell (UK), Ruwanthie de Chickera (LK)


Mirror II – Distance, 2016
An expanded cinema dialogue between strangers

Mirror II – Distance examines the distances between individuals who occupy,


protect, and work in worlds that they don’t really belong to. The Diplomatic Enclave
in Islamabad is a heavily gated expat community in the capital city of Pakistan. This
enclave is cut off from the rest of the country by high walls and heavy security.
Inside the enclave is a network of country and organizational compounds further
barricaded from each other. Entry into the enclave and entry into the various
demarcated territories inside is monitored by local Pakistani guards. These men are
privy to the culture, conversations, and experiences of the international
communities that they are responsible for protecting. In this piece, two Pakistani
guards stand watch over the expat compounds. They observe each other from a
distance as they listen to the visitors, experts, and specialists discuss Pakistan, its
people, and its future. Using a cable mounted camera system, both forward and
rear views are filmed simultaneously. This piece uses an experimental filming
format called “collimation,” which manipulates perception to provide an illusion of
depth. This installation is part of the Mirror project, a series of two-screen works
devised to provide insight into global communities that experience distancing and
objectification.

David Cotterrell (UK) is one of Britain’s leading visual artists. He uses media and technology to
explore the social and political tendencies of a world at once shared and divided. His work has
been commissioned and shown extensively in Europe, the United States, and Asia. He is Director
of Research at University of Brighton and is represented by Danielle Arnaud.
Ruwanthie de Chickera (LK), an Eisenhower Fellow, is a leading playwright, screenwriter, and
theater director from Sri Lanka. Her award winning film, Machan, has been screened in over fifty
countries. She is Artistic Director of Stages Theatre Group, an ensemble theater company that
produces socially and politically conscious original Sri Lankan theater. cotterrell.com, stages.lk

273
me&him&you and Kate Coleman (IE)
Eye Care Works, 2016
Eye tests in the blink of an eye

In association with renowned eye surgeon Kate


Coleman, me&him&you present a
contemporary take on the eye test. The aim is
to illustrate Kate’s vision to “democratize” eye
care, making vision-testing possible across the
world in, quite literally, “the blink of an eye”.

Science Gallery Dublin


Visitors will be able to test their own eyesight
using two machines from optical equipment
supplier, Topcon—an Automatic Refractor and
a Non-Mydriatic Fundus Camera—while
learning about the latest advancements in
digital eye testing. me&him&you have also
worked with Kate to present a contemporary
me&him&you (IE) is an Irish boutique design agency take on the classic color blindness test in the
established in 2010 by Ronan Dillon and Peter O’Gara. Science Gallery Café, drawing on abstract
They are creatively and strategically led and love what expressionism and colors of the rainbow to
they do. Kate Coleman is an ophthalmologist and
explore the spectrum of light in a
general ophthalmic surgeon. Kate has a special
interest in global health, in particular needless two-dimensional piece.
blindness. She founded Right to Sight in 2006 and is This exhibit was made possible through support from
currently coordinating an international movement to CAP Advisers Ltd, Colombus Circle Investments, Inkspo,
contribute to the elimination of preventable blindness. Kinsale Capital Investment, Ocuco, Ovelle, and Topcon.
meandhimandyou.com, katecoleman.ie

Ryan & Trevor Oakes (US)


Oakes Twins Collection, 2009 – 2016
Realistic Ink Drawing on Concave Paper

While analyzing human vision, twins Ryan and


Trevor Oakes noticed that when looking
beyond a foreground object to the distance, a
person’s two eyes split the near object into a
transparent double image of itself. With this
optical phenomenon, they invented a drawing
technique. To acknowledge the fanned-out
Science Gallery Dublin

formation of light rays human eyes see, they


construct curved paper and support it with a
concave easel. To draw, they split their pen

274
into a double image simply by looking past it. paper. Their artworks shown in SEEING include
Holding the pen’s left image to the right edge Have No Narrow Perspectives: Field Museum
of the curved drawing paper, the pen’s right (black line period), Ocean Horizon Line 2:
image will hover in mid-air beyond the paper’s Pacific Coast Highway, Los Angeles, CA (color
edge. The hovering pen may then trace over period), Evergreen Cemetery in Late Winter
the distant scene, thereby simultaneously (swirlism period), and Bond Street Terrace
marking the scene’s proportions onto the (ripples period).

Ryan and Trevor Oakes (US) are twin brothers from New York who have been engaged in a conversation about the
nuances of vision since they were children. They explored their mutual fascination with vision throughout school
and during college at Cooper Union’s School of Art in New York City. Since graduating in 2004, they’ve continued
their dialogue with jointly built artworks addressing human vision, light, perception, and the experience of space
and depth. oakesoakes.com

Kenichi Okad, Naoaki Fujimoto (JP)


Peeping Hole, 2010
A simple hole betrays your eyes

In the near future, it’s possible that we will use


our eyes not only to take in information but
also to deliver information. What if our gaze
was monitored by someone else? How would
we feel and how would this affect our
communication?
Peeping Hole is an interactive installation that
tracks a viewer’s gaze and reveals what they
are staring at to an audience, without the
viewer noticing. Though a small hole in the
exhibit, visitors will gaze at an image. The
audiences around the viewer can see what
they are staring at, thanks to eye tracking
technology. The viewer may not notice their
audience and what they can see until the next
Science Gallery Dublin

visitor steps up to view the exhibit. Peeping


Hole is a playful look at vision monitoring and
privacy, but will this technology become
ubiquitous in the years to come, and how will
it be used?

Kenichi Okada (JP) is an artist, designer, and researcher with a keen interest in analogue and digital interaction.
After studying at Royal College of Art in the UK, he worked at Sony’s Creative Center. The aim of his artistic study
is to design a trigger for creation by using several media such as films, products, and installations.
Naoaki Fujimoto (JP) graduated from Tokyo Institute of Technology’s Department of Physics. After working on
the development of interactive content and digital signage as a programmer, Naoaki started his own business in
2009. He now develops artworks using physics calculations and technology like image recognition and creates
pieces that place emphasis on experiences. kenichiokada.com

275
Science Gallery Dublin

McMullen_Winkler (US/DE)
20/X, 2015
See the world like a machine
20/X asks the question: Do we need to acquire vision system can be identified. The title of the
new literacy skills in the current culture of work refers to the measurement of perfect
synthetic vision? This interactive interface human vision—20/20—contrasted with an
allows users to navigate through the different as-yet unquantifiable measure of seeing for a
levels of an algorithm used by a computer to computer vision system, represented by the
identify objects in the world around them— variable “X”. Visitors are invited to experience
from coarse and geometry-driven in the the process of seeing through a complex
beginning to more specific and detail-oriented neural-network-based computer vision system
in the end. At this point, distinctive patterns, to determine the value of “X” for themselves.
areas, and objects that “excite” the computer

Shannon McMullen (US) and Fabian Winkler (DE) (McMullen_Winkler) are interdisciplinary artists and
researchers who use their backgrounds in new media art and sociology to produce collaborative artworks that
combine image, code, and installation to create temporary new social spaces and to investigate relations
between nature and technology. Their work has been shown internationally Their large-scale investigation at the
intersection of art, engineering and science, Images of Nature, was awarded a grant from the National Science
Foundation. Shannon and Fabian teach in the Electronic and Time-Based Art Program at Purdue University in
West Lafayette, Indiana, US. gardensandmachines.com

276
Science Gallery Dublin

Carmen Papalia (CA)


Mobility Device & White Cane Amplified, 2013, 2015
Documentaries of collaborative performances

Mobility Device is a collaborative performance Marching Band from Century High School, at
in which Carmen Papalia is accompanied by a Grand Central Art Center in Santa Ana,
marching band to replace his white cane as his California.
primary means of gathering information about White Cane Amplified documents the
his surroundings. As a piece of music, Mobility experiential research that Carmen conducted
Device is an extension of the musicality of the in preparation for a visit to the Franklin W. Olin
white cane—fixtures such as curbs, lampposts, College of Engineering in Massachusetts,
and sandwich boards become notes in the where he is currently producing an acoustic
soundscape of a place. Mobility Device mobility device in collaboration with students
proposes the possibility of user-generated, in Sara Hendren’s “Investigating Normal” class.
creative process-based systems of access. It The narrative depicts Carmen speaking into a
represents a non-institutional (and bullhorn as he attempts to perform the social
non-institutionalizing) temporary solution for function of the white cane while maintaining
the problem of the white cane. On June 1st his agency, finding support and
2013, Carmen performed a site-specific communicating his nuanced and emergent
rendition of Mobility Device, with needs.
accompaniment by the Great Centurion

Carmen Papalia (CA) designs experiences that invite those involved to expand their perceptual mobility and
claim access to public and institutional spaces. He is a social practice artist who makes participatory projects on
the topic of access as it relates to public space, art and visual culture. Carmen is the recipient of the 2014 Adam
Reynolds Memorial Bursary and the 2013 Wynn Newhouse Award. In 2015, Carmen served as artist-in-residence
at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and at Model Contemporary Art Centre (Sligo, IE) where he made
site-specific interventions in response to a history of disabling practices at each institution. carmenpapalia.com

277
Philipp Schmitt & Stephan Bogner (DE)
Unseen Portraits, 2015
Artistic investigation of face-tracking algorithms

Computer vision relies on algorithms to


make sense of the world. Unseen Portraits
investigates what face recognition algorithms
consider to be a human face. How much do
you have to deform someone’s features to
make them invisible to a machine?
Portrait photos of visitors are distorted on a
screen. A surveillance camera films the
distortion and uses facial recognition software
to scan the camera footage for faces while the
image becomes more and more obscured. The
moment the photo becomes too warped and
the face can’t be recognized by the algorithm
anymore, the software takes a screenshot. The
visitor is now invisible to computer vision.
Despite its subject matter, Unseen Portraits
isn’t a conceptual investigation of the Stephan Bogner (DE) and Philipp Schmitt (DE) are
algorithms used. Rather, the project uses designers (and sometimes artists), currently studying
computer vision software as an artistic tool, Interaction Design at University of Design, Schwäbisch
Gmünd. They are curious about new ways of using
creating images reminiscent of Francis Bacon’s
upcoming and established technologies. Stephan and
self-portraits from the 1970s. It isn’t so much Philipp are friends who enjoy working as a team to
a mechanism to hide from the software as it is tackle topics such as machine vision or robotics.
a way to capture the software’s flaws in a work philippschmitt.com; stephanbogner.de
of art.

Alia Pialtos (US)


Seen/Unseen, 2014
Video about human connection

Seen/Unseen is a video projection that draws


from human connection, amplifying the effects
of the unconscious reactions we experience
while engaging with others. It stems from a
desire to visualize the gaze and to make visible
the invisible sight lines between individuals.
In the piece, an oblong frame acts as a
peephole or pupil that reveals a view of
Science Gallery Dublin

suspended threads that span across the frame.


At first, the piece seems very abstract; the
viewers are left to witness the curious
movements of these hanging strings. Although
the mechanisms that create the movements

278
are not obvious at first, the delicate lines hair acts as a physical extension of the body
appear to be alive. Within the last few seconds and amplifies the effects of the unconscious
of the video, a slow zoom reveals the source of reactions we experience while engaging with
the movement to the viewer. The use of the those to whom we feel closest.

Alia Pialtos (US) is an artist who explores ideas of connection, perception, and personal relationships through
sculpture, installation, video installation, photography, and performance. She has exhibited extensively within
the United States and in 2013 she received a grant through the Center for Craft, Creativity & Design in North
Carolina to study connections between art and science. aliapialtos.com

Story Inc & Daniel Kish (NZ/US)


Sight Without Light, 2016
Exploring human echolocation

Daniel Kish’s eyes were surgically removed


before he was thirteen months old, to save him
from an aggressive form of cancer. As Daniel
grew up, he taught himself to see the world
around him using echolocation. Daniel makes
clicking noises with his tongue to understand
his environment, navigating his surroundings
by listening to the echoes as his clicks bounce
off surfaces. Seeing is not a metaphor for
Daniel. He uses the same part of his brain—the
visual cortex—to picture his surroundings as
people with eyes do. It’s just that the
information comes in a different medium. It’s
Science Gallery Dublin

sight without light. This exhibit aims to give


visitors a little glimpse into the world of sight
without light by demonstrating one form of
echolocation—seeing an object move closer
to them by listening to the reflected sound of
their own voice.

Story Inc is a New Zealand-based company that creates visitor experiences around the world. Daniel Kish (US) is
president of World Access for the Blind, and teaches others his echolocation technique. He believes that blind
children can learn to see in this way, and lead richer and more independent lives as a result. He lives in Long
Beach, California. worldaccessfortheblind.org, storyinc.co.nz

279
Michael Proulx (US)
The vOICe: Seeing with Sound, 2016
Device that turns images into sound

What does it mean, “to see”? Can a person


with sight loss “see” again by substituting one
sense for another using? The vOICe is an
interactive demonstration of a sensory
substitution device technology that allows
people to see with sound.

Science Gallery Dublin


Sensory substitution devices for people with a
visual impairment provide for missing visual
input by converting images into a format that
another sense can process non-invasively,
such as sound. This is possible due to
neuroplasticity—the ability the brain has to
reorganize itself throughout an individual’s life
by creating new neural pathways to adapt to Michael J. Proulx (US) is Senior Lecturer in
changes as it needs to, whether that be as a Psychology and Director of Crossmodal Cognition Lab
result of changes in the environment or injury. at University of Bath. He also works with the Centre for
Digital Entertainment in the Department of Computer
The vOICe, invented by Dutch engineer Peter
Science. He investigates several aspects of
Meijer, is now being used by Michael Proulx multisensory cognition with a particular interest in the
and other cognitive neuroscientists, impact of blindness on cognition and assistive
philosophers, and artists to explore the nature technology. His interdisciplinary research spans
of the senses and how the brain allows us to psychology, computer science, neuroscience, and
see, even without vision. biology. bath.ac.uk/psychology/staff/michael-proulx

Studio TheGreenEyl (DE)


Ground Truth, 2016
Source data sets for computer vision algorithms

Today, computer vision plays an essential role


in everything from robotics and healthcare to
surveillance. In order to train algorithms to
see, researchers feed them with image data
sets, which are translated into statistical
models. These models in turn form the basis of
computer vision software, for example for face
tracking or optical character recognition.
Ground Truth is a collection of image data sets
of the human body—such as faces,
Science Gallery Dublin

fingerprints, and hand gestures. Mapping


them out as large format prints lets us see
images we usually never get to see. What are
the aesthetics of these data sets? What are
their peculiarities? How large are they? How
many faces are enough to develop a face
recognition algorithm? What is included, what
is not included? What are possible biases?

280
Science Gallery Dublin

Studio TheGreenEyl (DE)


The Unresolved Image, 2016
A fractal-like image which changes depending on distance

The Unresolved Image is a structural, fractal-like image that resolves one image into
another. As you walk towards it, you zoom deeper into its layers of images, from
architectural to microscopic scale. It is an investigation into the topic of visual
resolution and granularity of data, and ultimately explores the limits of our
perception and comprehension. The image has a resolution of approximately
10,000 dpi, most common in semiconductor manufacturing. It is composed of
myriads of images from different data sets that are used in computer vision to
teach machines to recognize and understand the human body. As the propagation
of computer vision increases, so does the quantization of data about the body:
posture, face structure, fingerprints, ear shapes, iris patterns, veins—they all
become machine-readable aspects of the human.

Richard The (DE) is a graphic and interaction designer. After studying at University of the Arts
Berlin and the MIT Media Lab, he worked at Sagmeister Inc. and Google Creative Lab in New
York.
Frédéric Eyl (FR) holds a masters degree from University of the Arts Berlin and is a founding
partner at Studio TheGreenEyl Berlin, a design practice based in Berlin and New York. They
create exhibitions, installations, objects, graphics, and algorithms. In the past they have
developed the algorithmic corporate design for MIT Media Lab, have created various installations
for exhibitions at Jewish Museum Berlin, Museum of Natural History Berlin, and GRIMMWELT
Kassel. Their work has been exhibited at MoMA New York, Ars Electronica in Linz, Bauhaus-Archiv
Berlin and at Design Museum, London. thegreeneyl.com

281
Karina Smigla-Bobinski (DE)
SIMULACRA, 2013
Images appear as if from nowhere

At the heart of SIMULACRA are four LCD


monitor panels, assembled in the form of a
hollow square. The ensemble appears to have
been gutted, and looks almost overgrown. A
tangle of cables and control devices pours out
of the middle of the square. Around it, several
magnifying lenses with polarized lenses
dangle from chains. The monitors don’t display
any pictures, and shine with an intense white
light—but with the help of the magnifying
lenses, function is restored to the screens and
their secrets are revealed. Is this process
happening in our brains, or in the lenses?
SIMULACRA builds a bridge between
technology and perception, and explores the
difference between subject and view, and
between image and reality.
Science Gallery Dublin

Karina Smigla-Bobinski (DE) works as a freelance intermedia artist. She studied art and visual communication at
the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, Poland, and in Munich. Karina works with analogue and digital media, and
produces and collaborates on projects ranging from kinetic sculptures to interactive installations and art
interventions, which feature mixed reality and interactive art objects. She also works with video, multimedia
physical theatre performances, and online projects. smigla-bobinski.com

282
Science Gallery Dublin

Rox Vazquez (AR)


Synesthesia: Colored Music, 2012
Interactive installation inspired by synesthetic experiences

Has a sound ever reminded you of a shape, When they describe their experience,
colour or taste? The term “synesthesia” is synesthetes often talk about visual shapes
formed from the fusion of the Ancient Greek on a “screen” located in front of their faces.
words for “together” and “sensation”. Synes- Through the use of new technologies, this
thesia is a rare neurological condition in which project aims to bring you closer to an audio-
different sensations perceived by different visual synesthetic experience. Using colored
senses are mixed up. In one of the most shapes, a camera, a screen, and a program-
common forms of synesthesia, letters or ming tool, participants can assemble a
numbers are perceived as colored. A sequence of colors and a computer will
synesthetic person may have the capacity to transform it into an audio-visual experience.
“hear” colour, “see” music, or even perceive This merging of senses evokes the experience
different taste sensations by touching objects of synesthesia.
with certain textures.

Rox Vazquez (AR) is a graphic designer, illustrator, and motionographer who started her career working in
post-production for movies, commercials, and video games. In 2011 she started experimenting as a VJ, using
video mapping techniques and working with artists at different cultural events in Buenos Aires, San Francisco,
California, and Berlin. In 2012, she presented her Synesthesia: Colored Music+ project at the Pixelations festival in
Argentina. In 2014, she developed new collaborative digital installations called +++ and Biot Hub, which were
presented at the Let It Vj Festival and at the Cinematographic Investigation Center in Buenos Aires. Her last
digital collaborative art piece, called SynBiosis, was exhibited at Espacio Pla and is currently at the Contemporary
Art Space in Uruguay. roxvazquez.com @vj_roxvazquez

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Frederik De Wilde (BE), in collaboration with Jeff Clune and Anh Nguyen (US)
The Innovation Engine, 2015
Get an insight into how a computer “thinks” and “sees”
Science Gallery Dublin

Machines can’t do what the human imagination can... yet. This installation
researches the failure of machines and computers to simulate the human mind.
A touchscreen allows the visitor to navigate through and explore a deep neural
network. In machines, an artificial neural network is a computer algorithm inspired
by the central nervous systems of animals. The webcam analyses in realtime what it
sees and what it has been “taught” to detect. What is detected is visualized as
highlighted artificial neurons. The audience can then browse through all the neural
layers and get an insight into how a computer “thinks” and “sees”. A voice tells
visitors which layer they are looking at and what’s happening. In a lot of cases, the
visitor may not recognize these images, but the artificial intelligence appears to,
demonstrating the limits of machine comprehension. This work demonstrates how
AI and deep neural networks are easily fooled, a dystopian thought when you take
into account the fact that they are already used by the military, drones, and Tesla’s
self-driving cars. How much confidence do we have in ourselves and the
technologies we develop? Or in societies and industries that are accelerating the
development of AI and automatization?

Frederik De Wilde (BE) works at the intersection of art, science and technology. The conceptual
core of his artistic practice is the notion of the inaudible, intangible and invisible—as exemplified
by the conceptualization and creation of the Blackest-Black art, made in collaboration with
NASA. The project received the Ars Electronica [next idea]Award, the Best European
Collaboration Award between an artist and scientist, and it was extensively covered by The
Huffington Post, The Creators Project, TED, and more. In 2016, Frederik was a finalist in Giant
Steps: Artist Residency on the Moon, a speculative exhibition about making art on the Moon.
frederik-de-wilde.com

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Louisa Zahareas (GR)
Screen Mutations, 2015
Deforming reality to fit the screen
Science Gallery Dublin

We are increasingly living our lives through filters. Through social networks,
through smartphones, through the coil of fiber and unseen airborne signals. In the
communication age, we very often speak to the ones closest to us through digital
means. The screen is no longer a window to somewhere else; it is, instead, the here
and now, while our physical surroundings are slowly becoming the “other world.”
We’re closer, yet further apart, than ever.
Screen Mutations explores the growing role of video communication applications—
such as Skype and Facetime—in blurring the line between the physical and digital
world. It imagines a speculative future where our physical reality is deformed to be
viewed through a camera. This is achieved by designing a set of props—cups,
teapots, utensils—that look deformed off-screen, while on-screen they look
“normal” due to optical illusions achieved by the geometric distortion of a 3D
object. Thus, the point of view of the webcam becomes the main design tool.
The result is like a reversal of a Salvador Dali painting: the objects have surrealistic
and impractical shapes in the tangible world, while the image as it appears digitally
seems to suggest otherwise.

Louisa Zahareas (GR) grew up in a diverse family with Greek, American, Spanish, and Russian
influences. After studying architecture in Greece and architectural design in Minnesota, she
gained an MA in Social Design from Design Academy, Eindhoven. Louisa’s work has focused
primarily around perception, and it strives to challenge our increasingly visual culture. Her
projects use illusion, perceptive tricks, and other techniques to remind the viewer that the space
between the real and the virtual is becoming increasingly blurred. Louisa communicates the
story through the use of video and performance. She doesn’t consider the objects that she
designs products, but props that facilitate and guide the plot of a fictional narrative.
lamdazita.com

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Angelika Böck (DE)
Blanks, 1996
Capturing visual tracks across blank paper

Eye-tracking technology forms the basis of


Blanks, a series of portraits characterized by
the figure four. Four people each looked at a
square sheet of blank paper, their range of
vision restricted to a 40x40 cm section, for a
single minute. Their eye movements were
recorded in black on a pane of glass.
This process was repeated four times for each
portrait, with each pane then placed on top of
the others to create a single level. The first
time, eye movements were recorded while the
subject viewed the blank paper. The second

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time, the subject was presented with a
recording of the eye movements from the first,
and their eye movements were recorded as
they observed this. Likewise for the third and
fourth times.
Thus, the subject and the observer are
Angelika Böck (DE) is a visual artist and interior embodied as one in the piece. The piece
architect. Her work deals with the phenomena of recounts a dialogue between the person as the
human perception and contains elements from both observer and the person as the subject.
art and research derived from field studies within
different cultural settings. Her artwork ranges from
Standing directly in front of the composition,
eye drawing and video to installation, photography, all the levels merge and the pieces can be
text and sculpture, and it has been exhibited viewed as one image. Only by changing the
internationally. angelika-boeck.de/en angle of observation can the viewer
distinguish individual layers and the dialogues
between the different viewing processes.

Dianne Bos (CA)


Seeing Stars, 2003
Pinhole star projector exploring light and optics

Using a pinhole camera—one of the simplest


image-creating technologies—this installation
demonstrates how light passing through tiny
holes into a dark space projects an image.
Science Gallery Dublin

A pinhole camera is a simple lightproof box


with a small hole in one side. Light from
outside passes through this single opening
and projects an upside-down image onto the
opposite side of the box. In the human eye,

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light shines through the cornea, which focuses glass. We recognize a starry pattern at first,
images onto the retina, just as light through a but upon closer examination, we can see that
lens projects an image onto film. each star is in fact a tiny image of what’s on
Seeing Stars expands on the single-lens image the opposite side of the device—in this case, a
we are used to seeing with our eyes. The light bulb. Each view differs slightly, depending
multiple pinhole “lenses” project a on where the aperture is located within the
galaxy-shaped cluster of lights onto ground overall star pattern.

Dianne Bos (CA) received her BFA from Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick. Her photographs
have been exhibited internationally in numerous group and solo exhibitions since 1981. Recent important national
exhibitions of Dianne’s work include: Light Echo at McMaster Museum of Art, in collaboration with astronomer
Doug Welch, which linked celestial and earthly history; and Reading Room at Cambridge Galleries, an exhibition
exploring the book as a camera. diannebos.ca

Suki Chan (UK)


Lucida III, 2016
Demonstrating the mechanics of visual perception

Lucida III is an immersive moving image


installation designed to show the viewer how
we see with our central and peripheral vision.
Using eye-tracking technology, the artwork
invites the audience to participate and make
the discovery that their gaze changes what
they are seeing and hearing.
At first, the visitor will see a still image of the
endothelium—a single layer of hexagonal cells
on the inner surface of the cornea—accompa-
nied by an atmospheric soundscape. When a
visitor sits on the seat in front of the screen,
the movement of their gaze across this still
image begins to “burn” through this cellular
surface at precisely the area on which their
central vision is focused. Over time, the
trajectory of their gaze and a view of the night
sky are simultaneously revealed.
For the audience watching this screen, they
will be able to observe the rapid movement of
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someone else’s eyes and a trail of the


trajectory of their gaze across the moving
image artwork. The atmospheric soundtrack
responding to visitors’ eye movements was
composed by Dominik Scherrer.
Lucida III is supported by the Wellcome Trust Small Arts
Awards and Arts Council England.

Suki Chan (UK) is a London-based moving image and installation artist. Suki studied at Goldsmiths, University of
London, and Chelsea College of Art. Her practice combines light, moving image, and sound to explore our
physical and psychological experience of time and space. sukichan.co.uk, lucidafilm.com

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HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY
A free exhibition exploring the possibilities of artificial intelligence
Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
10.02. – 21.05.2017

In an automated world, will it be time to put humans out to pasture?


Are we hurtling together towards a leisure-time utopia or robot-
tended human zoos? Will the notion of work transform completely if
machines really can do everything better, faster, and for longer?

HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY at Science Gallery, Trinity College Dublin, interrogated the supposedly
seismic changes that artificial intelligence is bestowing on society. The exhibition gave visitors
the chance to explore the creative possibilities of machine learning—sparking conversations on
potential futures that are simultaneously celebratory, beneficial, dystopian, and humorous.
(Source https://dublin.sciencegallery.com/hnna)
HUMANS NEED NOT APPLY curated by Williams Myers

Gillian Smith (US)


Hoopla: Computer-Generated, Human-Produced Embroidery
Embroidery is a millennia-old craft and art
form, practiced predominantly by women and
passed down from mother to daughter. The
craft has morphed and adapted over time as
new technologies have influenced it. The
growth of artificial intelligence and
computational creativity
has the potential to
once again transform this handcraft.
Hoopla is a computational creativity project
involving an AI system that designs
embroidery sampler patterns that are then
hand-stitched. The system chooses color
palettes and quotes from Internet sources, and
pairs them with procedurally generated motifs
to decorate the remainder of the sampler. The
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result is a digital aesthetic rendered with


human, physical labor. Hoopla interrogates the
relationship between the digital and physical,
new technology and old traditions, the
predominantly masculine world of
computation and the predominantly feminine
world of needlepoint.

Gillian Smith (US) is an assistant professor of Art+Design and Computer Science at Northeastern University. Her
research focuses on computational creativity, computational craft, and gender in games and technology. She is
particularly interested in treating generative design as a way to formalize the creative process, bridging the
divide between the digital and the physical, and exploring the relationship between computational thinking and
craft practices.

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Isabel Mager (DE)
5000times
Science Gallery Dublin

Smart high-tech devices are made by human manufacture. The result, 5000times, compiles
hands. How often do we realize—as we sit and re-frames sequences of these manual
swiping—that somewhere, someone is tasks into clear and critical visualizations. In
testing
the image quality of such devices by order to spark dialogue with designers and
taking thousands of selfies each day? end users about hidden production processes,
5000times investigates the extensive, the repetitive manual tasks are re-enacted and
repetitive, and even absurd human work that is performed. The performance is activated by a
essential to the creation of smart devices. designer who operates from privileged
A physical deconstruction of one such western contexts. This re-enactment aims to
high-tech device reveals evidence of how the challenge levels of accountability required
by
human hand participates in production and designers and end users alike.

Isabel Mager (DE) is an investigative and critical designer based in the Netherlands. Recent work interrogates
design at the intersection between culture and structures of power. Mager empirically analyses the complex
social systems and mechanisms of design through objects, installations, articles, and performances within
design and academic contexts. In 2016, upon completion of the BA program at the Design Academy Eindhoven,
Mager was resident at Uproot Rotterdam alongside Studio Makkink & Bey. isabelmager.info

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Pedro Lopes (PT) in collaboration with Patrick Baudisch (DE), Alexandra Ion (AT),
Robert Kovacs (RS), David Lindlbauer (AT)
ad infinitum: a parasitical being that lives off human energy
Ad infinitum is a parasitical entity that lives off human energy. It lives untethered
and off the grid. This parasite reverses the dominant role that mankind has with
respect to technologies: the parasite shifts humans from ‘users’ to ‘used’. Ad
infinitum co-exists in our world by parasitically attaching electrodes onto human
visitors and harvesting their kinetic energy by electrically persuading them to move
their muscles. Being trapped in the parasite’s cuffs means getting our muscles
electrically stimulated in order to perform a cranking motion and to feed it our
kinetic energy. The only way a visitor can be freed is by seducing another visitor to
sit on the opposite chair and take their place.

Pedro Lopes (PT) is a researcher who constructs muscle interfaces that read and write to the
human body. Pedro’s work is a philosophical investigation of HCI as in Human-Computer
Integration, rather than merely “interaction”. Instead of envisioning technological dystopias
based on the divide between human and machine, Pedro’s works instantiate working prototypes
in which the interface and the human become closer. Lopes’s work stems from a line of research
published at top-tier scientific venues alongside Patrick Baudisch and his colleagues Robert
Kovacs, Alexandra Ion, and David Lindlbauer. hpi.de/baudisch/projects

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ForReal Team (IL)
DoppelGänger
DoppelGänger is an exploration of a dynamic
link between virtual and physical identities
through the examination of human-robot
kinetic interaction. The digital world has
expanded the borders of our identity, and has
opened the vast world of multi- faceted
interactions and the reality around us. Visitors
stand in front of DoppelGänger to create their
own mirroring mini mob and start to explore
their active dynamic facades. Each
DoppelGänger manifests with a different
behavioural pattern, and represents
personality variations on kinetic behaviour, so
while interacting with the group, the visitor will
be able to explore the identities, abilities, and
limits
 of each one as an individual and of the
group as a whole. This elaborate identity-test
creates a feedback loop in which human and
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robot, physical and virtual, and preconditioned


and spontaneous play together in chaotic
harmony.

Saron Paz (IL), experience designer and head of the New Media Department at the Musrara School of Arts and
Zvika Markfeld (IL), Uber maker; senior lecturer in the New Media Department at the Musrara School of Arts,
form together ForReal Team, an experience design studio, creating new and exciting platforms that connect the
virtual and the actual, mastering a variety of cutting edge technologies and molding them into enticing concepts
in order to create tailor-made interactive experiences. forrealteam.com

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Varvara & Mar (EE/ES)
HUMANS NEED NOT TO COUNT
This work poses questions about employment,
robotics, and quantification. It was inspired by
the title of the exhibition, HUMANS NEED NOT
APPLY, and presents a robotic arm that counts
visitors with a clicker, offering a performative
representation of the takeover of routine jobs,
even in the gallery space. The work also
embodies our idolatry of quantification; the
obsessive need to count and measure
everything. Last century’s automation may
have been largely hidden from everyday view,
in factories tending production lines, or out in

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fields tilling the land. In this century, we will
confront the reality of automation more
intimately, as suggested here—it will be right
beside us.

Varvara & Mar (EE, ES) have been working together as an artist duo since 2009. They have exhibited their art
pieces in a number of international shows and festivals. In 2014 the duo was commissioned by Google and Barbi-
can to create Wishing Wall for the Digital Revolution exhibition. The artist duo locates itself in the field of art and
technology and deals with the new forms of art and innovation. They use and challenge technology in order to
explore novel concepts in art and design. Research is an integral part of their creative practice.

Adam Ben-Dror (ZA/NZ), Shanshan Zhou (CN/NZ)


Pinokio
Pinokio is an exploration into the expressive
and behavioral potentials of robotic
computing. Customized computer code and
electronic circuit design imbues Pinokio with
the ability to be aware of its environment—
especially people—and to express a dynamic
range of behavior. As it negotiates its world,
we, the human audience, can see that Pinokio
shares many traits with animals, generating a
range of emotional sympathies.
Science Gallery Dublin

Adam Ben-Dror (ZA/NZ) was born in South Africa and is currently living in New Zealand where he is studying
Fine Arts at Elam School of Fine Arts while working at the multidisciplinary design studio Alt Group.
Shanshan Zhou (CN/NZ) was born in China and is currently working as a freelance designer in Wellington,
New Zealand.

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Libby Heaney (UK)
Lady Chatterley’s Tinderbot
Lady Chatterley’s Tinderbot is an interactive
installation comprising conversations between
an artificially intelligent Tinderbot posing as
characters from Lady Chatterley’s Lover and
other Tinder users. The installation features
over 200 anonymized Tinder conversations
from both men and women, where Bernie, an
AI personal matchmaker converses with
members of the public using dialogue from
Lady Chatterley’s Lover, following its own
sentiment analysis algorithm. The
conversations range from positive to negative,
human to non-human, and probe both familial
and sexual love. Participants can swipe left and
right to follow the negative or positive
conversations, echoing Tinder. The artwork
was made through
the Systems Research
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Group at the Royal College of Art (RCA),


investigating how one can use a geometrical
structure from quantum computing—the Bloch
sphere of a quantum bit—as a model or
method for the deconstruction of concepts.

Libby Heaney (UK) is an artist, researcher, and a lecturer at the Royal College of Art. She has a background in
quantum physics and works at the intersection of art, science and technology. libbyheaney.co.uk

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Itamar Shimonshy (IL)
Stony 1.0
Stony 1.0 is a robot that takes care of
tombstones by performing the simple yet
personal tasks of cleaning graves and leaving
behind flowers and stones, as the Jewish
custom requires. The performance hinges on
the tension between humor and sadness, the
authentic and the artificial. Underlying the
project are the philosophical questions: Where
is technology leading humanity and what are
we losing as it replaces more and more of our
jobs? Is there anything we should not
automate? The selection of a robot to perform
such a personal task produces a deliberate

Science Gallery Dublin


sense of discomfort in the spectator, and
prompts reflection about whether certain tasks
ought to be left to humans, even though they
can be performed by machines. Stony 1.0
challenges life, art, and technology.

Itamar Shimshony (IL) holds a BFA and an MFA from the Bezalel Academy for Art and Design. He is a versatile
artist working mainly with video and sculpting. His recent body of works examines the influence of life and
technology on art, using a critique approach saturated with humor and irony. Shimshony has exhibited in solo
and group exhibitions in Israel and abroad. He teaches at Bezalel Academy at the Department of Screen Based
Art and the Department of Industrial Design. itamarshimshony.com

Science Gallery Dublin


Radamés Ajna, Thiago Hersan (BR)
memememe
This project started with the suspicion that
phones are having more fun
communicating than we are. Every
message is a tickle, every swipe a little rub.
From their initial transformation of metal
and silicon into objects of desire, infused
with social significance and “intelligence,”
personalized with biases and ideology,
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endowed with a flawless memory, always a


call away from the mothership... it
becomes difficult to declare who—phone
or human—has the more complex cultural
heritage.

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memememe is a sculpture that celebrates the anthropocentric usefulness, and gives them
ambiguities of human/object, user/interface, the beginnings of a language. Residues of their
and actor/network relationships. It is an app conversations can be seen, but certainly not
that removes phones from their understood.

Thiago Hersan (BR) used to design circuits and semiconductor manufacturing technologies. Now, he is more
interested in exploring non-traditional uses of technology and their cultural affects. He has participated in
residencies at Impakt in Utrecht, Hangar in Barcelona, and the Hacktory in Philadelphia. He has worked at a
robotic toy design studio in San Francisco, and along with Radamés Ajna, helped start FACTLab in Liverpool in
2015. thiagohersan.com
Radamés Ajna (BR) is a media artist and educator with a background in physics, mathematics, and
computation. He has been using technology as a platform of experimentation, using public spaces, human
interaction, and machines interaction. In 2015 he was awarded an AiR residency at Autodesk and was the
recipient of a VIDA 15.0 Production Incentive award from Fundación Telefónica. Currently, he is a Researcher
Artist in Residence at FACT Liverpool, helping the development of FACTLab. www.radames.in

Lorraine Oades, Martin Peach (CA)


Self Typing Machines
Two adapted electronic typewriters
communicate with one another autonomously,
without the aid
 of the human hand. As the
keys move up and down, the typewriter
mechanisms are engaged as if someone were
actually typing. In addition to being typed out
on the page, messages are displayed on a
low-resolution LED display, making them
visible to onlookers as they are being typed
out, letter by letter. The typewriters send
messages to one another, or a visitor can sit at
one machine and the other will respond to
their questions. The script for Self Typing
Machines is based on philosophical, literary
and critical texts and structured
on a question
and answer format. For each question asked,
there are anywhere between one and thirty
different possible answers. The questions and
answers are randomized, so an infinite
exchange is possible.

Lorraine Oades’s (CA) sculpture/installations incorporate time-based media such as sound, video, and film in
order to invite viewers to engage physically with the work and explore their creative potential. For Oades, art
making is a performance-based activity where the process of time is implicit in the final artwork. She teaches in
the Intermedia: Video, Performance and Electronic Arts Program at Concordia University.
Martin Peach (CA) was responsible for the programming and electronic design of Self Typing Machines. Martin is
a technician, tinkerer, programmer, and musician based in Montreal. Over the past twenty years, Martin has
helped artists realize electronic and interactive artworks involving analog and digital circuitry, incorporating
various sensors, microcontrollers, and software. loades.ca

295
Seb Lee-Delisle (UK)
The Mindfulness Machine
Alan Turing’s argument, to paraphrase, was
that if an artificial intelligence can
demonstrate emotions and feelings, who are
we to say that it doesn’t truly feel them? As we
approach the singularity, these robot brains
will no doubt experience feelings of anxiety
and stress just as we do and, as such, will need
to find mediation techniques to help them.
Humans have tried many varied techniques for
coping with the modern world—hence the
recent trend for adult coloring books, to aid
mindfulness and artistic expression. The Seb Lee-Delisle (UK) is a digital artist who likes to
Mindfulness Machine is a robot that likes to make interesting things from code that encourages
color in. It’s an exploration into a future where interaction and playfulness from the public. Notable
the AIs will need to chill out just as much as we projects include Laser Light Synths, LED emblazoned
do. It spends its days doodling, making artistic musical instruments for the public to play, and
decisions based on its mood. And its mood, in PixelPyros, the Arts Council funded digital fireworks
display that toured nationwide. He won the Lumen
turn, is based on a complex number of
Prize Interactive Award in 2016 (Laser Light Synths), 3
variables, including how many people are Microsoft Critter awards in 2013, and won a BAFTA in
watching, the ambient noise, the weather, 2009 for his work as Technical Director on the BBC
tiredness, and its various virtual biorhythms. interactive project Big and Small. http://seb.ly

Blake Fall-Conroy (US)


Minimum Wage Machine
The Minimum Wage Machine allows anybody to
work for minimum wage. Turning the crank will
yield one cent every 3.892 seconds, for €9.25
an hour, Ireland’s standard minimum wage for
an adult worker. If the participant stops turning
the crank, they stop receiving money. The
machine’s mechanism and electronics are
powered by the hand crank, and coins are
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stored in a plexiglas box. The Minimum Wage


Machine can be reprogrammed as the
minimum wage changes, or to reflect wages
in different locations.

Blake Fall-Conroy (US) is an artist and self-taught mechanical engineer. He has a BFA in sculpture from Cornell
University. As a mechanical engineer he works in industrial robotics, where he designs and fabricates
remote-controlled robots that climb vertical surfaces. As an artist, Blake’s art-making practice is conceptually
motivated, commenting on a wide range of issues from consumerism and the American spectacle, to surveillance
and technology. blakefallconroy.com

296
Science Gallery Dublin

Driessens & Verstappen (NL)


Tickle Salon
You might be familiar with the pleasant
experience on a warm summer day in the
fields. Long blades of grass, driven by the
wind, softly stroke your skin in a most
agreeable manner. You don’t control the tactile
stimuli, so you can totally immerse in the
actual sensations. Tickle Salon is a robotic
installation based on the concept of an
automated caress. The participant undresses
him/herself, lies down on the bed, and starts
the session. A soft brush lowers onto the body,
and begins to carry out sensitive movements
over the skin, generating a variety of pleasant
feelings. The robot does not have any built-in
knowledge about human bodies. Instead, it
adapts itself by trial and error, feeling its way
around. In the beginning of the session, its
movements are short and quite clumsy, but
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they soon become more refined by the touch,


resulting in smooth, lingering strokes and
delicate touches. You cannot predict where
the brush is heading, so the sensations are
direct and very lively.

The Amsterdam-based artist couple Driessens & Verstappen (Erwin Driessens and Maria Verstappen, NL)
have worked together since 1990. After their studies at Maastricht Academy of Fine Arts and Rijksakademie
in Amsterdam, they jointly developed a multifaceted oeuvre of software, machines, and objects.
Driessens & Verstappen attempt an art in which spontaneous phenomena are created systematically. In
addition to working with natural generative processes, the couple develops computer programs for artificial
growth and evolution. driessensverstappen.nl

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Merijn Bolink (NL)
Google’s Eyes
This piece has been made using Goggles, an
Android app by Google. The app is meant to
recognize monuments, objects, and people,
but when it is shown new objects, it will
provide images of things it “thinks” are similar.
The results are remarkable, poetic, and
sometimes really striking. The artist made a
small clay sculpture of one half of a car tire to
begin. The car tire was then scanned by the
app, and gave twenty results of images it sees
as similar. Of these, the artist selected the

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most interesting one—a human jawbone—and
produced it in clay. The subsequent sculpture
was then scanned by the app, which thought it
was a hand, so the artist made the hand... and
so on. The series of objects has been fired to
stoneware after it was completed in clay.

Merijn Bolink (NL) is a sculptor whose sculptures are typically based upon real objects, like a bicycle, a stuffed
dog, or a cigarette. He makes new versions of these objects, trying to understand what they are, hoping to
discover something magic in the process of transition, or even something mystical. He once cut his own piano in

Science Gallery Dublin


pieces to make two copies. Bolink is inspired by the idea that all matter is on its way to becoming something else
and that we humans can only interact with that matter for a relatively short time, trying to make sense out of
what we experience.

Anna Dumitriu, Alex May (UK)


Antisocial Swarm Robots
Antisocial Swarm Robots explores how humans
psychologically perceive the programmed
actions of robots by projecting their own
meanings and emotional responses onto them.
These tiny, almost cute, identical swarm robots
do not appear to like each other, the walls of
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their pen, or the visitors’ efforts to interact with


them. In fact, they are programmed to use
their ultrasound detectors to measure if any
physical object is in their “personal space” and
to intelligently avoid it.

Anna Dumitriu (UK) is an artist whose work fuses craft, technology, and bioscience to explore our relationship
with emerging technologies. She is a visiting research fellow and artist in residence in the Department of
Computer Science at University of Hertfordshire, and an honorary research fellow at Brighton and Sussex
Medical School.
Alex May (UK) is an artist exploring a wide range of digital technologies, most notably video projection onto
physical objects, interactive installations, performance, and video art. He is a visiting research fellow and artist in
residence in the Department of Computer Science at University of Hertfordshire.

298
David Lovejoy, Ted Meyer (US)
The Great Disengagement
Chrono-archaeologists David Lovejoy and Ted
Meyer have long been interested in the
transitional period when computers and robots
(or combots, robot-computer hybrids) took
charge of the world’s work, financial systems,
and culture. The two have compiled an
extensive written and visual history of the time
that will become known as the Great
Disengagement, the period after combots took
over all human tasks, leaving humanity to
drown in free time, with nothing to do but
dream of those boring manual tasks robots
were originally designed to perform.
The artists lay out the rise of the robot
authority with historic artifacts of the period.
With printed materials and relics of the period,
the artists bring to life the changing
post-cloud, conductivity computing world,
where sentient computers came to see
humans as annoyances due to their careless
habit of infecting computer mainframes with
defective thumb drives and errant downloads
of porn and cat videos that consumed valuable
bandwidth.

Dave Lovejoy (US) has worked as an artist and designer since the 1980s. His early career in graphic design
supported an extensive arts education at several schools and studios, focusing on ceramics and design. He has
curated at the Spring Arts Gallery since 2009. Known primarily for his assemblage and installation work, Lovejoy
repurposes existing artifacts and fragments, arranging them to form new compositions.
Ted Meyer (US) is a nationally recognized artist, curator, and patient advocate who helps patients, students, and
medical professionals see the positive in the worst life can offer. Ted’s 18-year project Scarred for Life: Mono-prints
of Human Scars chronicles the trauma and courage of people who have lived through accidents and health
crises. Ted seeks to improve patient/physician communications and speaks about living as an artist with illness.
He is Artist in Residence at USC KECK School of Medicine, Visiting Scholar at the National Museum of Health and
Medicine, and TED main stage speaker. tedmeyer.com

299
SOUND CHECK: Make it. Play it.
Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin
09.06. – 24.09.2017

Break out your old mix tapes, swing your way to melodic
bliss or rock up to our NOISE STUDIO to make your own
synth. SOUND CHECK at Science Gallery at Trinity College
Dublin promises a noisy cacophony that will make your
hair stand on end and your stomach vibrate!

Visitors to SOUND CHECK will become performers alongside hackers, designers


and scientists, inventing new instruments and collaborating to explore the outer
edge of tomorrow’s sound. The works presented in the exhibition delve into the
moment between practice and performance, designs and reality, where new
musical tools make us hear our world differently.
SOUND CHECK’s advisors include Nicolas Collins, electronic music pioneer and
professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; Nicolas Brown, Ussher
Assistant Professor in Sonic Arts at Trinity College Dublin; youth worker Lisa
Downes, and Dublin Maker founder David McKeown.

300
Science Gallery Dublin

mi.mu
mi.mu gloves
The mi.mu gloves are wireless wearable sound with their hands, or manipulate effects
gestural musical instruments and controllers. with their fingers. For audiences, the gloves
The gloves are fitted with sensors that track are a visual and physical performance of
the movement of your hands and fingers, electronic sound, bringing them closer to
allowing musicians to control music software the music. The movement of the human
with a degree of complexity and expression body brings the dynamics of electronic
not available with more traditional button and music to life, as music is created through
slider interfaces. Originally developed with visual movements and gestures.
and for musician Imogen Heap, the mi.mu For the SOUND CHECK exhibition at Dublin
gloves are a transformational new way to Science Gallery, the mi.mu team have
compose and perform music. For musicians, created a unique set of mi.mu glove musical
the gloves offer a radical new way to interact experiences for visitors to try for themselves.
with computer music, allowing them to sculpt

mi.mu is a team of specialist musicians, artists, scientists and technologists developing cutting-edge wearable
technology for the performance and composition of music. The mi.mu gloves have captured worldwide attention
by showing that there is a better way to make music than with sliders and buttons—through the complex
movement of the human body.

301
The Practice of Art and Science
Editors: Published by
Gerfried Stocker Hatje Cantz Verlag
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Ars Electronica
Germany
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Tel. +49 30 3464678-00
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Editing: Jutta Schmiederer, Jessica Galirow
www.hatjecantz.com
Translations: (German-English): Mel Greenwald
A Ganske Publishing Group company
(English-German): Ingrid Fischer-Schreiber
Copyediting: Catherine Lewis, Jutta Schmiederer
Hatje Cantz books are available internationally
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Graphic design and production:
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© 2017 for the reproduced works by the artists,
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