roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

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RE/SEARCH: Art, Science, and Information Technology NSF and NEA Why Here and Why Now ? Why ? How ? Here Where ? Roger F Malina Director Observatory Marseille Provence

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Roger Malina presentation to NSF NEA workshop 2011

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Page 1: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

RE/SEARCH: Art, Science, and Information Technology

NSF and NEA

Why Here and Why Now ? Why ? How ? Here Where ?

Roger F Malina

Director Observatory Marseille Provence

Page 2: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

My Perspective, Biases• Astronomer, Physics, Instrumentation

– Director Observatoire de Marseille Provence– PI NASA Explorer Satellite, IT Testbed– Cosmology Group , Dark Energy Observatory (JDEM)

• Editor, Organiser « Art/Science/Technology »– Founder of the 2 Leonardo non profits– Executive Editor Leonardo Publications MIT PRESS since

1982

• Co-Director of Art-Science Residency Programs– Institut Mediterraneen de Recherches Avancees– Established by the CNRS and the three Universities in

Marseille.

Page 3: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Leonardo ISAST/OLATS :43 years, 5000 authors

Arts & New Technologies………&Sciences…..In Historical and Theoretical Perspective

Page 4: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Evolution of the Leonardo Knowledge Network over >40 years

cf Leyeserdorf and Salah• Maps on the basis of

the Arts & Humanities Citation Index: The journals Leonardo and Art Journal, and ‘Digital Humanities’ as a topic,”

• (Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61(4) (2010)

787-801

Page 5: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

TOP 10 2010 LEONARDO Author

New Criteria for New Media Jon Ippolito, Joline Blais, et al

The Shiraz Arts Festival: Western Avant-Garde Arts in 1970s Iran Robert Gluck

Architecture as Nature: A Biodigital Hypothesis Dennis Dollens

Midas: A Nanotechnological Exploration of Touch Paul Thomas

Marina Abramović's Seven Easy Pieces: Critical Documentation Strategies for Preserving Art's History Jessica Santone

An Information Sublime: Knowledge after The Postmodern Condition Robert Pepperell

From Router to Front Row: Lubricious Transfer and the Aesthetics of Telematic Performance Bob Giges, Edward C. Warburton

Page 6: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Why Now• Cf Goldberg and Davidsen: Future of

Learning Institutions in the Digital Age– Computers and Humanities to….– Digital Humanities to….Networked Knowledge

• Critical Mass of Art-Science Practice– Exemplars– Art-Science vs Art-Technology

• Maturity of new media field, « born digital »

• Societal Urgency: Arts as Hard Humanities

Page 7: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

networking humanities ( from D Goldberg)

Mobilizingmobile humanities

- ResponsiveResponsible

- inter-activity

- problems and themes,

not disciplines

Page 8: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Institut Pytheas in Aix Marseille University

• Will bring together four « observational disciplines » – Astronomy– Ecology and Biodiversity– GeoSciences/Environmental Sciences– Oceanography

• It is really really difficult: – Data, IP, Methods, Societal Contexts, Funding Cultures

• There are good reasons why we have disciplines• Science is in-homogeneous

Page 9: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Why should astronomers work with ecologists ?

• 03HP Climate Change Observatory

• Installed at Observatoire de Haute Provence

• Long term monitoring of ecological drift

• Controlled experiment on reduced rain fall

• Data Base Management• H Vasselin: Artist in

Residence

Page 10: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Why should Astronomers work with Ecologists

• ANTARES under sea neutrino observatory

• Bioluminescence proved to be dominant source of noise in physics signal

• Underwater marine ecology observatory established using same infrastructure

• COSMOPHONE sound art project at CPPM

Page 11: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Why Should Astronomers work with Ecologists ?

• Detection of Vegetation in the Spectrum of Earthshine off the moon

• Measurements of total earth albedo for climate models

• Education outreach projects at Observatory drawing on public interest in astronomy and ecology

• International Year of Astronomy

• International Year of Biodiversity

Page 12: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Why promote art-science-technology interaction

• Creativity Arguments

• Innovation Arguments

• Cultural Embedding and Appropriation

• The Ethics of Curiosity : – The Values Problem

Page 13: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

« Types » of Art-Science Practice

• Type I: Mutual Influence, Dual Outputs– Teams– Dual Career Scientist-Artists. Engineer-Artists

• Type II: Artistic Creativity as a domain for

scientific inquiry

• Type III: Culturally transformative

technological developments

• Type IV: Cultural Appropriation

• Type V: STEM and STEAM

Page 14: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Exemplar:The Sound of Trees Growing

• David Dunn (composer, sound artist)

• Jim Crutchfield ( complexity scientist)

• Artist driven recording of sounds of trees growing led to research project in the coupling of ultrasound from trees, beetles, forest fire system dynamics

Page 15: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Ethos of Scientific Curiositycf Bunge 2006, Morton

• Intellectual Honesty

• Integrity

• Epistemic Communism

• Organized skepticism

• Dis-interestedness

• Impersonality

• Universality

Page 16: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Towards an Ethics of Curiositycf Sundar Sarukkai: Science and the Ethics of Curiosity 2009

• Curiosity is embodied• Curiosity is enacted• Curiosity is cultural• Curiosity is social• Curiosity is collective

• The claimed distinction between “pure” and “applied” science is not sustainable

• In some cultures, eg some Indian traditions, doubt rather than curiosity is a dominant driver ( cf Descartes)

• “Beware of binary oppositions” !

Page 17: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

But Curiosity is embodied: Char Davies: Ephemere

• Varela:

• All knowledge is conditioned by the structure of the knower

Page 18: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

We underestimate how our nature impacts ontology and epistemology

• Einstein:”

• “The universe of ideas is just as independent of the nature of our experience as clothes are of the form of the human body”

• Stelarc and his “third arm”

Page 19: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Curiosity is enactedeg Marcel.li Antunez Rocain Zero Gravity performance

• Physicst Richard Feynman:

• “What I cannot create, I cannot understand”

• Empathy

Page 20: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Curiosity is SocialMarco Peljham and MakrolabBuddhist Proverb (Nishitani): “the nature of the task of the “ought’ is the other-directedness of the “is”

Page 21: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Curiosity is Cultural                                                 

• Saint Augustine: It was curiosity led me along the false trails before submitting to christian baptisms

• Francis Bacon: It is Charity that must motivate the knower, not curiosity

• Brandon Ballengee

Page 22: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Hard Humanities

• Anthropogenic impact driving global change on time scale commensurate with generations.

• Culture has always in the past adapted to changing conditions– Winners and losers

• But Culture now becomes a design problem– Eg What is a sustainable city

Page 23: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Caveats

• Arts and Sciences are Heterogeneous social practices

• Science and the Arts have evolving methodologies

• Multi-disciplinary continua, Institutional Contexts– Arts and Design– Arts and Humanities– Science and Technology: IT…Biology…Physical

Sciences..– Education

Page 24: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Caveats

• Epistemological Distinctions– Observational and Experimental Sciences– Theory and Praxis– Sensory Modalities

• It is really difficult– Metrics, Success Criteria

• Is inter-disciplinarity a discipline ?

Page 25: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

The Basic Linear Model of Research Innovation circa 1970

Basic Research Applied Research

CommercialDevelopment

1

1 This “works” just often enough to say “it works”

Patent Services

Patent Licensing

But what about the Arts and Humanities ?

Page 26: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

« Triple Helix of Innovation Theory » cf Gerald Barnett : 3rd Gen Innovation

Theory• Innovation theory seeks to cross

link:– Universities– Corporations– Government

• Missing Strands– Cultural Imaginary drivers

• Artists and designers as Inventors and Researchers

– Social Innovation– Philanthropy 2.0– New Locii of Innovation In Social Context

• Non Profit , Non Governmental Sector• Temporary Autonomous Zones• Learning Institutions in Digital Age

Page 27: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

R1

IP

G2NationalInternat

C1

NGO

G1Local

NPO

R3R4

R2

C2 C3

ATEC ?

C4

NPO

Page 28: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

L’IMéRA : Institut MÉditerranéen de Rechechers Avancees

• La Condition Humaine des Sciences

• The Human Condition of the Sciences

• International Residency program for scientists, engineers, artists, humanities scholars

• Bridge Physical/Social Sciences, Arts/Humanities

• Pôle Méditerranée• Pôle Arts-Sciences-

Instrumentation-Langages

Page 29: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

IMERA• 5 year « endowment »

Ministry of Research/Educ• Network of 4 French Social

Science and Humanities

Institutes of Advanced Study• Operated by CNRS and 3 Universities in Aix Marseille• Arts-Sciences-Instrumentation-Language

– Artists in Residence, Scientists in Residence– Group Residencies Artists and Scientists. Social/Physical– 3 month, 9 month and 3 month/year for 3 years

• Overcoming asymmetries of discourse and practice

Page 30: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

IMERA resident:Nano Scientist James Gimzewski

• Physical Intelligence (DARPA)• When do collections of atoms

begin to exhibit behaviours we interpret as intelligent.

• Philosophers, artists, nano scientists

• « Inter-facial » Intelligence• « Scale »

• Image Right: Fireworks artist Pierre Alain Hubert

Page 31: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

IMERA resident: artist Rachel Mayeri

• « Cinéma for Primates », ..retirement home for primates…• Will work with Primatology and Neurobiology labs,

President University Ethics Committee• Human/non human cognition• Animal models for medical research• Wellcome Trust Funding through ArtsCatalyst UK

Page 32: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Ciro Cattuto and team (Turin)

• Modeling complex network phenomena in systems that entangle technological and social factors

• Hospitals, Schools..• Mixed team of

scientists, designer , multi media artist

• Social to Physical Sciences

Page 33: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

HOW: Mecanisms for “Socially Robust” Science and Technology

cf Helga Nowotny and : Mode 2 Science and Technology

• Artists in Labs• Scientists and Engineers in

Studios• Town Scientists• Micro Science, Citizen’s

Science • Open sourcing of data about

your own world• Developing the ‘hard

humanities’ to change the content and direction of science and technology

• Left: Ruth West ‘Atlas in Silico’

Page 34: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

ArtsActive Network Artists in R and D Labs Programs

• Art in Labs, Switzerland, Jill Scott

• ANAT/Synapse, • Symbiotica Australia• Dissonancias, :• Laboral, Spain• Art and Genomics: Holland• ECTOPIA; Portugal• ZERO ONE: Climate Clock• UK ITEM, ArtsCatalyst, FACT/

Blue Sky Residencies • Leonardo – • IMERA , France• TRANSGENESIS; Czech rep

• Observers: James Leach, Emmanuel Mahe (Orange), Bronac Ferran, Sammuelle Carlson

• List of patents filed by artists• Exchange of Intellectual Property

approaches• Jurying systems• Announcements• Scientists in cultural organisations ?

• www.artsactive.net

Page 35: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

See review article by Peter Denning, September 2010 issue of American Scientist

• Fourth « domain » of science with physical, life and social sciences

• « Computing: Study of Information Processes, Natural and Artificial »

Page 36: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Denning’s « Principles of Computing » 2010• Computation

• Communication

• Coordination

• Recollection

• Automation

• Evaluation

• Design

• What can and cannot be computed

• Reliably moving information between places

• Effectively using many computers

• Representing, storing and retrieving information from media

• Discovering algorithms for information processes

• Predicting performance of complex systems

• Structuring software systems for

reliability

Page 37: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

R1

IP

G2NationalInternat

C1

NGO

G1Local

NPO

R3R4

R2

C2 C3

ATEC ?

C4

NPO

WHEREHERE ?

• .

Page 38: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Science and Emerging Technologies as a Cultural Terrain• Intimate Science

• Creating intuition on mediated sensory data, Information Aesthetics,

• Designing/Interacting with simulated

systems• Making sense/meaning of dense data/

petabyte era

• Hard Humanities• Applied Humanities• High Throughput Humanities• Peoples Science, Citizen’s Science,

Micro Science• Social Innovation, Philanthropy 2.0

• Image Right: Frank Malina: Cosmos IV

Page 39: Roger malina nsf nea workshop 2011 ss

Thanks for your Attention