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Showing posts from April, 2022

Event 4 - Color, Light, Motion Episode 10

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This weekend I attended Ted Victoria’s presentation about his work about using physics and light. This event was hosted by Professor Vesna, who informed us that there was a common theme of using light and projectors to represent life-like images (Vesna). Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of Victoria Vesna's Introduction . Youngstown, 30 Apr. 2022. For example, Ted Victoria took a projector and put it inside an empty building in his hometown. The projector was shining shadows of fish swimming, so it looked like there were brine shrimp swimming inside the building, making it an aquarium. This garnered a lot of attention from people and Ted Victoria often found that people were scared of his artwork (Victoria). Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of Ted Victoria's Brine Shrimp project . Youngstown, 30 Apr. 2022. The way Ted Victoria accomplished these shadows and projections is by using a projector, actual shrimp, and mirrors to reflect the light and make shadows. Victoria seems to have a strong ba

Week 4: Medicine and Technology and Art

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This week’s lectures are my favorite so far because I am interested in the field of medicine. In the second lecture, Professor Vesna gave an example of the MRI machine and x-rays as being a form of art (Vesna). I agree with this viewpoint, and am fascinated by how these machines work. To start, MRIs use electromagnetic waves and magnets to produce cross sections of your body (Mayo Clinic). This can be used to check form abnormalities inside the body, like the brain. “Neurological MRI: Sagittal View.” Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for Brain Tumours , SickKids, https://www.aboutkidshealth.ca/article?contentid=1334&language=english. I personally have experience being in an MRI machine, and it’s a pretty funky experience. You’re instructed to take off any metal from your body to make sure it does not influence any of the magnets, and then inserted into a white tube. If you’re in the pediatric side of the hospital, there might even be headphones they give you to listen to music and c

Event 3 - From Forces to Forms Episode 3: Repairing Nature

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This weekend, I attended the final part of From Forces to Forms, Episode 3 titled "Repairing Nature.” Presented at the Pratt Institute’s Manhattan Gallery, this episode focused on nature and fighting climate change, which is a very relevant and growing problem in our world (Vesna). Professor Vesna actually presented her own project, titled “Noise Aquarium,” a project that stressed the importance of Earth’s oceans, showing there is a lot of noise and life under the water’s surface. Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of Victoria Vesna's Noise Aquarium . Manhattan, 16 Apr. 2022. One of the projects, created by Maria Antonia Valerio, focused on the depiction of the phylogenetic tree of corn. Her project focused on how the genetics of corn was manipulated in order to produce modified corn seeds that were thought to be better for farming. Valerio is actually a philosopher, having graduated from the University of Mexico, where she now teaches, so specifically her project explores the idea of

Week 3: Robotics + Art

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This week Professor Vesna focused on evaluating the effect of industrialization, and the attitude towards robots throughout history. As industrialization progressed, there were different perspectives on this automation during different times (Vesna). Sala, Riccardo. Art, Aura and the Doomed Search for the Perfect Selfie , Guardian News & Media, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/aug/22/art-aura-doomed-search-perfect-selfie.  For example, in the 1930s, philosopher Walter Benjamin disapproved of the production of technology that would be able to mass produce products of art (Benjamin). He argued that mass producing products would make each product lose its uniqueness, which he referred to as “aura.” Warhol, Andy. “Marilyn Diptych.” ARTHISTORYOFTHEDAY , WORDPRESS.COM, 1962, https://arthistoryoftheday.wordpress.com/tag/mass-production/. This opinion was not shared by all, especially after World War II, where the advancement of technology was now associated with power. In fa

Event 2 - From Forces to Forms Episode 2: Morphogenesis

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This weekend, I attended the virtual event “From Forces to Form: Episode 2: ‘Morphogenesis’” presented at the Pratt Institute’s Manhattan Gallery. This was the second part of the “From Forces to Form” exhibition, and a continuation of the event I attended last weekend. Since I had also attended the first part last weekend, I was familiar with how the format of the meeting would be. Different artists took turns explaining their scientific projects one by one, describing the process and reasoning they went through in order to create their art. The projects chosen for this exhibition were all related to natural forces being depicted through art (Levy). Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of Ellen Levy's introduction to the exhibition . Manhattan, 9 Apr. 2022. One of the projects used gravity as a paintbrush. Artist Haresh Lalwani used 3D simulations and worked with hammering steel to create sculptures that represent the motion of gravity. One of his sculptures, titled GR Flora, studied the effe

Week 2 - Math + Art

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Math and art have been closely related throughout history. Before this week's materials, I did not think these fields were related because art and life are unpredictable, whereas math is all about being able to predict and understand the world we live in. Anyone can make art the way they want to, but anyone cannot solve a math problem and get  the correct answer the way they want to. However, there are some examples referenced from the lecture that make me consider otherwise.  For example, there are a lot of patterns in life that we can deduce from relating back to math, such as geometric beadwork. Geometric beadwork uses tiny beads that are in the same shape to create an overall picture, often in a different shape than the beads themselves ( McKinnon) . By using shapes to create pictures, we are using math and art together. Beningfield, Karen. “/Petal-Triangle-Growth-1.” CONTEMPORARY GEOMETRIC BEADWORK,                https://beadmobile.files.wordpress.com/2022/01/petal-triangle-g

Event 1 - From Forces to Form #1

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This weekend I attended the virtual event “From Forces to Form” presented at the Pratt Institute’s Manhattan Gallery. This exhibition focused on recognizing scientific practices are often taken for granted and under appreciated, by representation through art. The projects shown were cleverly designed and required a lot of effort. Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of an introduction to the exhibition . Manhattan, 2 Apr. 2022. One project looked at the wave patterns of Earth, titled “1.8” to represent the 1.8 microseconds that Earth shifted because of the Japan 2011 earthquake and tsunami. This project was created by Janet Echelman, and became so popular that it was put into the Smithsonian museum in Washington DC, even seen by former first lady Michelle Obama ( Echelman) .  Chotai, Vivek. Screenshot of Janet Echelman's "1.8" . Manhattan, 2 Apr. 2022. Another project, by Adam Brown and Robert Root-Bernsteir, focused on representing the origin of life (“ReBioGeneSys – Origins of Li