Kristoffer Gansing on Mon, 11 Dec 2017 11:50:42 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Locating ArtScience |
Dear Eric and all, Thanks for a really enjoyable discussion so far. Not long ago, I would skip over most ArtScience related material, because as Florian Cramer already pointed out, this seems to belong to another era and a particular lab-oriented approach that isn't up to scratch to the challenges of today. But in the past year or so, I had been wondering why Art & Science seems to be making a comeback and Eric's article is a timely response to this. The reason why I am under the impression that this "field" is surging back is simple - I surprisingly found that this year, all my transmediale related invitations to participate in a panel or give a talk were under an ArtScience umbrella. This is rather unusual for a festival that isn't overtly concerned with Art & Science and its relation to the legacy of Leonardo and artists that work within the natural or so called hard sciences. What I ended up doing at these talks was arguing for transversal approaches, across and beyond disciplines (much like Eric is advocating), the recognition of the value of the arts beyond advancing knowledge in linear ways (art does not have to be good, innovative) while still interacting with all sectors of society and the importance of including humanities based approaches into ArtScience. The latter point was made by Eric too and reiterated in the discussion with Gary Hall - and I can't stress how important this is as there seems to be a tremendous lack of critical theoretical discussions in many of these artscience gatherings. At the same time though, there is a doer's mentality in ArtScience which is refreshing in our current times, not to say that it is reactionary but rather that there is a positive outlook on hybridity and the possibility of making ArtScience out of that. This became evident to me at a meeting in Grenoble under the title "Future Collaborations between Art & Sciences and their Role for Europe" which seemed untypical as the participants were a mix of "softer" cultural institutions like transmediale and Schloss Solitude, EU politicians, science labs and big corporations. It was uneasy for sure, but there was a feeling of uncertainty of how to move this field further that could be productive. At least, it is important to intervene in this field as Eric suggests, since a lot of policy making and financial resources are being invested in it, an aspect which has not so much been brought up here yet. Just take the Horizon 2020 programmes which has set a new agenda for collaboration between art, technology and science on a European level and which dictates a very technology-centred view with clear quantifiable results. A few interesting projects have been able to slip through and we need to see much more tactical action and long-term strategies to influence this growing field. As Eric's post was initially coming from an institutional context, maybe there are other voices on the list who can share experiences from working "within" projects in this field and reflect on how it might be transforming? best, Kristoffer # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: