My current week research is about textiles and new technologies (clothes, installations, performance art) so, I'm looking for examples and opinions about art and sciences applications.
Of course we can link art to science. My whole research has been related to this.
I am a liaison between the sciences and the English Department at the University of Arizona. One big area of overlap in literature is science fiction. By that I mean the more cognitively challenging science fiction such as that of H. G. Wells, Isaac Asimov, Jules Verne, Stanislaw Lem, Karel Capek, Kurd Lasswitz, Josef Nsevadba, Octavia Butler, Joanna Russ, Ray Bradbury, Ursula LeGuin and so on.
For instance when in Tucson our university was the planner of the 2007 Phoenix Mars Lander Mission, the dance department gave a concert called Mars and Other Stories.
I just posted a new update in mu Rhetorical Analysis project called "How SF got its Ghetto." It is important to understand the socio-economic-political aspects of knowledge creation of all kinds since as the cliche goes, everything connects to everything.
Your question, Oujlakh, is so broad that one does not know where to start. :-) But, of course science and art can be linked. People do this all the time. I would say it is in the nature of humans to do it. For instance, I consider myself as someone who is doing (social) science by addressing a distinct art form (post-dramatic theater and art performance). So I am making a link between particular kind of science on the one hand and particular form of art on the other. But there are many ways of building links between art and science on many levels and by using different elements from each arena.
Of course we can link art to science. My whole research has been related to this.
I am a liaison between the sciences and the English Department at the University of Arizona. One big area of overlap in literature is science fiction. By that I mean the more cognitively challenging science fiction such as that of H. G. Wells, Isaac Asimov, Jules Verne, Stanislaw Lem, Karel Capek, Kurd Lasswitz, Josef Nsevadba, Octavia Butler, Joanna Russ, Ray Bradbury, Ursula LeGuin and so on.
For instance when in Tucson our university was the planner of the 2007 Phoenix Mars Lander Mission, the dance department gave a concert called Mars and Other Stories.
I just posted a new update in mu Rhetorical Analysis project called "How SF got its Ghetto." It is important to understand the socio-economic-political aspects of knowledge creation of all kinds since as the cliche goes, everything connects to everything.
Thank you both. About Jules Verne, Gloria, do you know The royal deluxe compagnie based in Nantes? It's amazing!!! If you want, I have a friend and researcher working on it and on steampunk culture related to dystopia novels...
By bringing to life a layer that has been hidden for centuries between paint and lining canvases of Old Master paintings, I try to connect Art, Science and History.
Key'words' are: hand-weaving; computeraided-handloom; x-ray images of historical paintings; analyses; technical art history; textile history
The picture shows the reconstruction of the canvas as used by El Greco, Titian and Diego Velázquez (left to right) for their master works in XVI and XVII century.
Yes, I have seen some short YouTube videos on Nantes museum to Jules Verne. Do you know about the Nantes Science Fiction convention? They would be very interested in what you are doing and might be a venue for your performances.
Let's see if I can find the link. There is also a general European-wide SF wed site run by Cristian Tamas in Romania.
Contact in Nantes Festival "Utopiales"...: Ugo Bellagamba
Web Site: https://www.utopiales.org/
Planet Europa web site of news of European science fiction: