Colliding Worlds: How Cutting-Edge Science Is Redefining Contemporary Art Colliding Worlds: How Cutting-Edge Science Is Redefining Contemporary Art

Colliding Worlds: How Cutting-Edge Science Is Redefining Contemporary Art

    • 17,99 €
    • 17,99 €

Descrizione dell’editore

A dazzling look at the artists working on the frontiers of science.

In recent decades, an exciting new art movement has emerged in which artists utilize and illuminate the latest advances in science. Some of their provocative creations—a live rabbit implanted with the fluorescent gene of a jellyfish, a gigantic glass-and-chrome sculpture of the Big Bang (pictured on the cover)—can be seen in traditional art museums and magazines, while others are being made by leading designers at Pixar, Google’s Creative Lab, and the MIT Media Lab. In Colliding Worlds, Arthur I. Miller takes readers on a wild journey to explore this new frontier.

Miller, the author of Einstein, Picasso and other celebrated books on science and creativity, traces the movement from its seeds a century ago—when Einstein’s theory of relativity helped shape the thinking of the Cubists—to its flowering today. Through interviews with innovative thinkers and artists across disciplines, Miller shows with verve and clarity how discoveries in biotechnology, cosmology, quantum physics, and beyond are animating the work of designers like Neri Oxman, musicians like David Toop, and the artists-in-residence at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider.

From NanoArt to Big Data, Miller reveals the extraordinary possibilities when art and science collide.

GENERE
Scienza e natura
PUBBLICATO
2014
16 giugno
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
352
EDITORE
W. W. Norton & Company
DIMENSIONE
13,9
MB

Altri libri di Arthur I. Miller

La rivoluzione nella fisica del novecento La rivoluzione nella fisica del novecento
2013
The Artist in the Machine The Artist in the Machine
2019
Einstein, Picasso Einstein, Picasso
2008
Empire Of The Stars Empire Of The Stars
2011
137: Jung, Pauli, and the Pursuit of a Scientific Obsession 137: Jung, Pauli, and the Pursuit of a Scientific Obsession
2010