07.04.17
The ‘Future Emerging Art and Technology‘ exhibition, open from April 14th at the LifeSpace Science Art Research Gallery, presents a series of works of art created during collaborations between six internationally acclaimed artists and cutting-edge scientists. The works vary in form, from simulations and visualisations to performances and sculptures. The project is funded by FET Open programme and aims to give alternative perspectives on new technologies and make them widely accessible.
Underwater robots express distress at the pollution of the Earth’s waterways; a bacterium is cleaned of drug resistance and returned to its pre-antibiotic era state using CRISPR gene editing technology; an immersive installation gives an experience of the quantum realm through the simulation tools that are made to study it. These are three of the exhibits at a ground-breaking art-science exhibition that offers artists’ perspectives on some of the very latest technologies being developed.
Curator of LifeSpace, Dr. Sarah Cook says, “the works in this exhibition are a challenge to scientists in more than one way. Firstly, they ask us to understand the content of complex research projects involving new technologies from a totally different perspective, that of the artist. For instance, how can a performance art work tell us what supercomputing entails? Secondly they suggest the potential of involving artists in scientific research projects to create engaging, persuasive and experimental reflections on the bigger picture – the real-world implications of that research, at a human scale.”
The artists were selected during an open process in March 2016 and paired with scientist groups working on European Union FET (Future Emerging Technologies) open research projects such as exploring gene regulation, quantum physics, underwater robotics, carbon capture, and exascale computing. The artists are:
The exhibition preview will be held on Thursday April 13th 5pm-7pm. The artists and project organisers from partner organisations across Europe will be present to talk about the work and research featured. It opens to the public on April 14th and runs until June 17th. It is open Saturdays 11am-5pm or Monday to Friday by appointment. Entry is free. Appointments can be made by emailing lifespace@dundee.ac.uk. You can find more information about the event on their website.
While you’re here, why not watch LifeSpace’s curator, Dr. Sarah Cook, give a Pecha Kucha talk on the relationship of art, new media and responses to U.S. elections?