Registration is now open for The Two Cultures: Visual Art and Science c.1800-2011! The quality of submissions from Postgraduates working internationally has been astounding, and we hope to confirm a full schedule by the end of next week.
The cost of the conference is only £5, and it looks set to be an exciting and thought-provoking day.
Please follow the link below to the University of York online store to secure your place now!
http://store.york.ac.uk/browse/extra_info.asp?modid=1&prodid=1114&deptid=155&compid=1&prodvarid=0&catid=302
Thursday, 1 March 2012
Tuesday, 24 January 2012
Call For Papers
The Two Cultures:
Visual Art and Science c.1800-2011
Interdisciplinary
Postgraduate Conference
Thursday 26 April 2012
History of Art Department, University of York
Keynote Speaker: Professor Arthur I. Miller (Emeritus, History and Philosophy of Science, UCL):
It is bizarre how little of twentieth-century science has
been assimilated into twentieth century art.
C.P.
Snow, 1959
In his 1959 lecture “The Two Cultures” C.P. Snow asserted
that the intellectual life of western society was increasingly being split into
two polar groups: the sciences, and the humanities. The notion that visual
artists and scientists are two entirely isolated strata of human activity and
experience has proliferated since the nineteenth century, and continues to plague
academic institutions and political policy today. The term "scientist was coined in 1834 as a means of designating those who worked professionally in the various sciences. The "scientist" was described by direct analogy to the artist; suggesting that these now seemingly dichotomous areas of scholarship were in fact intended to exist in direct relationship to one another.
This conference seeks to challenge Snow’s separatist assertion,
and explore the ways in which visual artists have acknowledged, appropriated and assimilated the ideas and
theories of the ever-expanding field of “science” in their work since c.1800,
the moment at which the professionalization of the sciences engendered a
seemingly irrevocable split in the academy. As a result, we hope to recoup a
sense of interdisciplinary fluidity amongst the international fields of visual
arts and sciences, in order to build as complex and nuanced a picture as
possible of the exchanges and interconnections between the “two cultures” over
the past two centuries.
We invite abstracts for papers of 20minutes by postgraduates
that address the theme of relationships between the visual arts and the
sciences 1800-2011. We welcome submissions from students working across the
humanities, fine arts, social sciences, and applied sciences, but ask that the
papers specifically address such relationships from the perspective of visual
or material culture. Possible themes for discussion might include, but are by
no means limited to:
- Collaborations and communications between artists and scientists.
- Representation and/or use of scientific concepts, vocabularies or technologies by an artist in the creation of works.
- Modern medicine and representations of the body.
- Representations of warfare, machinery and technological development – their physical and psychological effects/treatments.
- The influence of post-Darwinian structures/theories on the visual realm.
- The effect of/responses to new media such as photography, film, and internet.
- The advent of cybernetics and computers, from early experimental use to contemporary digital media.
- The ways in which the relationship between art and science intersects with issues of class, gender, sexuality and ethnicity.
- The attitude of art education to science and vice versa.
- How established genres such as landscape and still-life have responded to scientific developments.
Abstracts should be no longer than 300 words. We ask that
applicants also submit a brief biography in addition to their abstract. The
deadline for submission is February 24th 2012. All submissions should be sent
to Kirstin Donaldson and Robert Sutton at TwoCultures2012@gmail.com along
with any questions regarding the conference or abstracts.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
