Robots in distress - boredomresearch
Boredomresearch BY-NC-SA
14
sep
2017
30
sep
2017

FEAT expo in Brussels

Scientific research is a collaborative affair. Teams from across academia and industry work in partnership to solve problems and test new methods. The European Union’s major research programme – Horizon 2020 – which is allocating €80-bn to research that aims to strengthen the EU’s position in science, foster industrial innovation as well as research that addresses major social concerns. The six works of art in this exhibition are directly the result of EU-funded research into new and emerging technologies, which seek to solve diverse problems from carbon capture to monitoring pollution.           

What role can artists play in collaborative scientific research? The FEAT project – Future Emerging Art and Technology – has paired artists with FET research consortia across Europe. The goal: to explore unconventional ways of thinking and technology. The result: works of art that may be in keeping with the artists’ own ways of working, but on radically different topics than we usually think are the concern of artists, from quantum physics to supercomputing.

The exhibition asks the visitor to understand the content of complex research projects from the perspective of the artist. It also suggest the potential of involving artists in scientific research projects to create engaging, persuasive and experimental reflections on the bigger picture – the real-world implications of that research, at a human scale.

The artists whose work is included here are some of the most exciting working today. Through their explorations – most shown here for the first time – it is hoped that a greater awareness of new technologies ensues, and new societal discussions are opened up.

With the participation of :

  • Evelina Domnitch & Dmitry Gelfand “Ion Hole”
  • Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman & Joe Gerhardt) “Parting the Waves”
  • Špela Petrič and Miha Turšič “Becoming.a(thing)”
  • Anna Dumitriu “Make Do and Mend”
  • Boredomresearch (Vicky Isley & Paul Smith) “Robots in Distress”
  • Pinar Yoldas “Lattice Disruption”

FREE ENTRANCE

Opening hours
Tue - Sun, 10 am - 6 pm
Thu, 10 am - 9 pm

Closed on Monday

Wanneer

14
sep
2017
30
sep
2017

Locatie

BOZAR/Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels, Belgium

project

EU official flag

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 686527.