Re: [-empyre-] Living Experiments

2013-09-18 Thread nik gaffney
--empyre- soft-skinned space--
On 18/09/13 06:01, Adam Nocek wrote:
 --empyre- soft-skinned space--

 Thanks, Phillip, for this excellent post! I really like the way you want
 to extend, for example, Oron's insights and take them outside of the
 laboratory setting. To do this, you seem to imply, or in any case, play
 with the idea that experiment should be thought in much broader terms
 than the scientific experiment. I wonder if you could comment on how
 you see the experiment functioning outside of this setting, or how,
 alternatively, a broader sense of experiment might transform the laboratory?

...perhaps a broader notion could be 'structured curiosity' with the
degree of structure or direction shifting between undirected tinkering
(threshold noise) at one extreme and highly structured, specifically
directed protocol at the other. curiosity lies beneath every experiment,
but not every curious act is structured as an experiment. is the
curiosity focused on a specific outcome or question (is there a Higgs
Boson?), exploratory (what would happen if...?), transformative (with
the aim of changing the experimenter) or something else?

with regard to how this can work in a setting that is situated outside
of an explicitly/exclusively scientific context, we have found it
illuminating to adopt particular techniques where useful (pragmatic
epistemology?) and reject them if they get in the way.. .

The Scientific Method (c.f.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method)

 - begin the experiment with a clear statement of intent
 - create a structure to facilitate the intent
 - do things and document them as they happen in an appropriate form
 - review what has been documented in a form accessible to others
 - change statement of intent if required and repeat

Against Method
 - is the process, product or production sufficiently interesting to
reward further experimentation? is there a good story?
 - anything goes

and on...
nik

-- 
[ f o a m ]  -  http://fo.am
   grow your own worlds [借景]
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[-empyre-] Living Experiments

2013-09-16 Thread Adam Nocek
--empyre- soft-skinned space--Hi all,

A wonderful discussion this week. I thank you all for participating! I
thoroughly enjoyed -- and I am continuing to enjoy -- all your posts on
bioart and related fields. I'm especially intrigued by the discussion on
aesthetics. I think that bringing together Neal White, Jennifer Fisher,
among others, into conversation with Brian Massumi and A.N. Whitehead et
al. is challenging and important work. More thoughts later.

I'd like to extend a special thanks to Oron Catts and Rich Doyle for their
wonderful contributions this week!

This week I'd like to welcome four new guests into the fold: Adam Zaretsky
(who is no stranger!), Phillip Thurtle, Maja Kuzmanovic, and Nik Gaffney.

Here is a bit of bio for each of our guests:

Phillip Thurtle is director of the Comparative History of Ideas program and
associate professor in History at the University of Washington. Thurtle is
the author of The Emergence of Genetic Rationality: Space, Time, and
Information in American Biology 1870-1920 (University of Washington Press,
2008), the co-author with Robert Mitchell and Helen Burgess of the
interactive DVD-ROM BioFutures: Owning Information an Body
Parts (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), and the co-editor with
Robert Mitchell of the volumes Data Made Flesh: Embodying
Information (Routledge, 2003) and Semiotic Flesh: Information and the Human
Body (University of Washington Press, 2002). His research focuses on the
material culture of information processing, the affective-phenomenological
domains of media, the role of information processing technologies in
biomedical research, and theories of novelty in the life sciences. His most
recent work is on the cellular spaces of transformation in evolutionary and
developmental biology research and the cultural spaces of transformation in
superhero comics.

Adam Zaretsky, Ph.D. is a Wet-Lab Art Practitioner mixing Ecology,
Biotechnology, Non-human Relations, Body Performance and Gastronomy. Zaretsky
stages lively, hands-on bioart production labs based on topics such as:
foreign species invasion (pure/impure), radical food science
(edible/inedible), jazz bioinformatics (code/flesh), tissue culture
(undead/semi-alive), transgenic design issues (traits/desires), interactive
ethology (person/machine/non-human) and physiology (performance/stress). A
former researcher at the MIT department of biology, for the past decade
Zaretsky has been teaching an experimental bioart class called VivoArts at:
San Francisco State University (SFSU), SymbioticA (UWA), Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute (RPI), University of Leiden’s The Arts and Genomic
Centre (TAGC), and with the Waag Society. In the past two years he has
taught DIY-IGM at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and New York University
(NYU).  He also runs a public life arts school: VASTAL (The Vivoarts School
for Transgenic Aesthetics Ltd.) His art practice focuses on an array of
legal, ethical, social and libidinal implications of biotechnological
materials and methods with a focus on transgenic humans.

http://www.youtube.com/VASTALschool http://www.youtube.com/VASTALschool



Maja Kuzmanovic holds a Master of Arts in Interactive Multimedia and her
specialization is interactive film and storytelling. She is currently
director of the Brussels-based laboratory, FoAM, where she works with
various art and technology collectives and explores novel modes and
resources of cultural expression. She was involved in the development of
the Design Technology course at the Utrecht School of the Arts. She
previously worked as Artist in Residence at the Center for Mathematics and
Computer Science in Amsterdam, and the National Center for Information
Technology in Sankt Augustin, Germany. In 1999, Kuzmanovic was named by
MIT’s Technology Review Magazine as one of the top 100 young innovators of
the year. Her current interests span alternate reality storytelling,
patabotany, resilience, speculative culture and techno-social aspects of
food  food systems.

Nik Gaffney is a founding member of the Brussels-based laboratory, FoAM, as
well as a media-systems researcher. Gaffney has previously worked as a
graphic designer and programmer for Razorfish AG in Hamburg and Moniteurs
in Berlin. His studies covered the fields of computer science, cognitive
science and organic chemistry at Adelaide University. As one of the
founders of the artists' collective, mindfluX, he worked on installation
pieces, performances and the editing and distribution of the electronic
magazine mindvirus. Gaffney has been an active collaborator in the
performance group Heliograph, helping shape their vision for hybrid arts
performance. He is a member of and prominent contributor to farmersmanual,
a pan-european, net-based, multisensory disturbance conglomerate, whose
'ship of fools' filled the canals of Venice with sound during the 2001
Biennale.
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