IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Getting Closer to Nature: Artists in the Lab

Getting Closer to Nature: Artists in the Lab
View Sample PDF
Author(s): James Faure Walker (University of the Arts, London, UK)
Copyright: 2012
Pages: 15
Source title: Biologically-Inspired Computing for the Arts: Scientific Data through Graphics
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Anna Ursyn (University of Northern Colorado, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-0942-6.ch018

Purchase

View Getting Closer to Nature: Artists in the Lab on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

The term bio art has emerged in the past few years to cover the kind of art that seems to come from the biology lab, with simulations of life forms through generative processes, with data taken from organisms, or even through organisms themselves. This is often at the micro level, invisible to the naked eye, where seeing requires some degree of computer modeling. This could be a hybrid form, serving the interests of both art and science, but recent exhibitions have prompted some debate about the divergent roles of art and science. Rob Kesseler and Andrew Carnie are artists who have worked alongside biologists to produce visual works of extraordinary quality, in both their decorative and intellectual aspects. They follow in a long tradition of artists who have been fascinated by the close-up detail. Drawing manuals of a hundred years ago advocated the study of plant forms, sometimes as the basis for pattern design. The author describes his own use of scientific sources, arguing that there is also a place for art that evokes the wonders of nature without being tied to the visible facts.

Related Content

Annabel Jane Dover, Alex James Pearl. © 2023. 21 pages.
Gail Flockhart. © 2023. 37 pages.
Sally Waterman. © 2023. 23 pages.
Judith Martinez Estrada. © 2023. 26 pages.
Mireia Ludevid Llop. © 2023. 25 pages.
Richard T. Sawdon Smith. © 2023. 30 pages.
Panayotis Papadimitropoulos. © 2023. 21 pages.
Body Bottom