Art & Science
The basis of the „European Digital Art and Science Network“ is a big manifold network consisting of scientific mentoring institutions (ESA, CERN, ESO and Fraunhofer MEVIS), the Ars Electronica Futurelab and seven European cultural partners (Center for the promotion of science, RS – DIG Gallery, SK – Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation, ES – Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova, SI – GV Art, UK – Laboral, ES – Science Gallery, IE. The EU funded project lasted from 2014 to 2017. The Online Archive of Ars Electronica provides an overview of the individual activities of the network and also delivers information about the network itself, the residency artists and the involved project partners and the jury.
European Digital Art and Science Network - Audiomaterial
Collection of audio material, produced in the context of the European Digital Art & Science Network at Radio FRO.
Radio Fro, cultural broadcasting archive: https://cba.fro.at/series/ars-radio
Gerfried Stocker, the artistic director of Ars Electronica, introduced latter network at the Ars Electronica press conference. As well as on the guided press tour through the „Elements of Art and Sciences“ exhibition in Ars Electronica Center.
Some of the present artists, whose work are still exhibited in AEC, explained the main idea behind these. One of them was María Ignacia Edwards, an artist from Santiago (Chile), who was awarded with the residency at European Southern Observatory (ESO). She presented her work “Mobile Instrument”. Nick Ervinck, as he stated, is promoting new architecture with his work „Viunap“, a 3D print of one absurd building initially presented as 2D wallpaper. And Kepler´s Dream, a work by Ann-Katrin Krenz and Michael Burk, is an aesthetical investigation, which exploring projection technologies and 3D printed computationally created content, emphasized Michael Burk.
With what exactly did the English artist duo convince the jury, explained the Director of Arts@CERN Mónica Bello, one of the members of the Collide@CERN Ars Electronica jury. She also held a lecture about the CERN´s engagement with the art in the Prix Forum titled Art & Science Round Table at this year´s Ars Electronica Festival. Contributing guest and her colleague from CERN, Michael Doser, discussed the collaborations of art and science, a chaos and a mess in the research process, and why organisations as CERN should look for a crazy and visionary projects with a high likelihood of failing.
How will the City of the future look like and how should our living enviroments develop? One thing at least is clear: Mobility will be one of the major issues in this regard. For one thing different types of mobility, and on the other hand also movement itself. ‚Cause in the end mobility is nothing more or less then movement. In the Symposium „future mobility, a challenge for art & science“ during the ars electronica festival on Friday, the 4th September, the questions went from „how will the car of the future look like?“ to „how do we get people to move back to the villages“ or „how should the post refugee city look like“?
There are so many directions of research, concerning the individual and the public mobility and the question, how they should be organized in the future.
You’ll hear parts of the symposium in this radioshow, the speakers were:
Alexander Mankowsky (DE, Mercedes/ futurologist)
Marina Mara (AT, Ars Electronica Future Lab/ ropopsychology)
Shunji Yamanaka (JP, technical designer and professor in the Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies/ University of Tokyo) & Takayuki Furuta (JP, leader of the robot development program of Japan Science and Technology Agency)
Hiroshi Ishii (JP/US, MIT Media Lab)
Ou Ning (CN, artist/ He lives in the village of Bishan, where he founded the Bishan commune in the year in 2011, which works as an intellectual circle for the revival of the rural areas in China)
Killian Kleinschmidt (DE, formerly Camp Manager UNHCR)
Microphone & Creator: Sarah Praschak
Robert Devčić, founder and director of the GV Art, spoke in the behalf of this UK’s leading contemporary art gallery, which aims to explore and acknowledge the inter-relationship between art and science. Lale Eric Dobrivoje from the Serbian Centre for the promotion of science explained Center´s role in the European Digital Art and Science. The center is only few years old but it´s already actively engaged in bringing science community closer to a larger public, also international. Among others, we interviewed Ian Brunswick, programme manager of the Science Gallery (Dublin, Ireland). He explained the aim of the art & science network. Jurij Krpan from the Kapelica Gallery (Ljubljana, Slovenia) as well shared some thoughts about art & science collaboration and its aim. Richard Kitta, artistic director of DIG Gallery from Slovakia, presented works, which are exhibited in DIG Gallery, and discussed their position in the network. Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation is an independent public-private organization, its director José Carlos Arnal described their projects at the network meeting. For the end, Lucía García Rodríguez, Managing Director of LABoral, concluded the meeting by explaining LABoral´s role, and plans for the future collaborations in the „European Digital Art and Science Network“.
In the first edition of ARS Radio we are presenting two artists-in-residence within the 2016 art&science@ESA Open Call – Irish media artist Aoife van Linden Tol with her spectacular explosive performance called Star Storm, and American kinetic artist and roboticist Sarah Petkus with her inventive project: The Wandering Artist.
We talked about the catalog with Andreas J. Hirsch, who coedited it together with Gerfried Stocker. Andreas J. Hirsch is art curator, writer and artistic photographer.
Next to the interview, we are serving also a short audio glipse into the panel discussion “From Encounter to Collaboration – A Quantum Shift in Art & Science?” with Victoria Vesna und Jurij Krpan.
Victoria Vesna is an Artist and Professor at the UCLA Department of Design Media Arts and Director of the Art|Sci center at the School of the Arts and California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI).
Jurij Krpan is the Art Director of the Kapelica Gallery in Ljubljana, Slovenia. The Kapelica Gallery is a space dedicated to artists whose work does not fit into other gallery spaces of Slovenia’s capital. The Gallery is also one of seven European cultural partners in The European Digiatal Art and Science network.
Music (CC): Muddy Wires
Music (CC): Silence
He explains visions for the future of human-material interactions and future ways of communication. The concept of „RADICAL ATOMS“, which was not only the name of an exhibition at ARS ELECTRONICA Centre 2017 – but is also a vision, a guiding principle for their work, founded by Hiroshi Ishii.
Radical Atoms takes a leap beyond Tangible Bits by assuming a hypothetical generation of materials that can change form and appearance dynamically, becoming as reconfigurable as pixels on a screen. Radical Atoms is a vision for the future of human-material interaction, in which all digital information has a physical manifestation so that people can interact directly with it.
A Radio show about future possibilities of communication.
Musik by FingersofGod; Titel of the song: View From Above
Further Informations:
https://www.aec.at/news/
https://tangible.media.mit.edu
https://soundcloud.com/fingersofgod
„European Digital Art and Science Network“ is the title of launched initiative by Ars Electronica, which aims to combine scientific topics with creative and innovative approaches to digital art. Art&Science project enables to the artists to get engaged in the scientific work at ESA, ESO or CERN, which are scientific mentoring institutions, and are representing Europe’s peak in scientific research. The Ars Electronica Futurelab is providing state-of-the-art technical production possibilities in a trans disciplinary discourse. And in the end, seven European cultural partners (Center for the promotion of science, RS – DIG Gallery, SK – Zaragoza City of Knowledge Foundation, ES – Kapelica Gallery / Kersnikova, SI – GV Art, UK – Laboral, ES – Science Gallery, IE) are representing strong and various European cultural- and artistic positions. All these institutions are consisting a big manifold called „European Digital Art and Science Network“.
Ars Electronica created the inititative to enable artists to participate in residencies at research institutes to connect science with digital art approaches. In this radio-show Romina Sylvia Achatz is in conversation with two scientific partners of Ars Electronica: Bianka Hoffmann and Sabrina Haase from Fraunhofer MEVIS, an Insitute for Medical Image Computering, as well as with Claudia Mignone and Karen O‘ Flaherty from ESA- The European Space Agency.
The European Space Agency (ESA) is Europe’s gateway to space. Its mission is to shape the development of Europe’s space capability and ensure that investment in space continues to deliver benefits to the citizens of Europe and the world. They talk about their positive and enriching experience with the two artists in residency: Aoife van Linden Tol with her spectacular explosive performance called Star Storm, and Aroboticist Sarah Petkus and her project „The wandering artist“.
Alongside media artist Yen Tzu Chang, Fraunhofer MEVIS scientists Sabrina Haase and Bianka Hofmann designed a creative workshop for pupils in the field of computer-assisted medicine and sound art within the „STEAM Imaging“ artist-in-residency program.
Music: „Beatific Vision“ by Fingers of God
Weitere Informationen:
https://www.aec.at
https://www.mevis.fraunhofer.de
http://www.esa.int
http://www.changyentzu.com
https://soundcloud.com/fingersofgod
European Southern Observatory (ESO), one of the two scientific institutions in the network, is intergovernmental astronomy organisation in Europe and the world’s most productive astronomical observatory. With the headquarters in Germany, it operates three observing sites in Chile: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor.
María Ignacia Edwards, an artist from Santiago – Chile, was awarded with the residency exactly at the ESO in Chile, where she came up with the idea about “Mobile Instrument”. The second part of her residency she spent at the Ars Electronica Futurelab in Austria, where the mentioned work was exhibited. We interviewed Maria Ignacia Edwards at the Ars Electronica Festival 2015, after she gave a lecture about her experiences at the ESO observatories La Silla and ALMA, and at the Ars Electronica Futurelab. We talked about her recent and current works, her experiences in art & science, and how she sees the interaction between those two.
Maria Ignacia Edwards worked at the ESO close to Fernando Comerón, he is namely the ESO’s Representative in Chile. He took part in the Prix Forum titled Art & Science Round Table as well within this year´s festival. Fernando Comerón introduced ESO and its work, and explained why astronomy has a privileged position.