Whitney Dail was born in Alexandria, VA to a Naval aviator and an artist-entrepreneur, and was raised in Annapolis, MD. For five years, Whitney worked as a graphic designer in the comic book industry but returned to school in 2009 to pursue a better-suited Master's degree in Arts Administration. She is currently in the process of writing and researching her thesis on expanding art, science, and technology interactions in U.S. cultural institutions.
Credit: Image by Jonathan Yoerger.
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11 posts tagged artscience
“…film and particularly the manner of its creation, holds steadfast as a prime example of the strength and power inherent in cross-disciplinary thinking that characterizes the dynamic and transversal nature of so many of today’s creative explorations in the field of interactive installations from the work of art, design, and engineering.”
Lukas Feireiss on Stephen Spielberg’s film Minority Report (2002) anticipating technological advances. From his essay “Eureka! Creative Exploration Between Invention, Inspiration, and Intuition” in A Touch of Code: Interactive Installations and Experiences.
Art-Sci-Tech has so much going on in various avenues, areas, and communities. Its complexity makes it difficult to visualize.
There’s the blanket term “new media art.” Then there’s bioart, information art, algorithmic art, genomic art, maker/DIY art, hacker art, eco art, cybernetic art, video art, kinetic art, interactive art, etc. Other areas of experimentation include robotics, virtual reality, gaming, citizen science, and more, which just touches the surface.
I like Andrea Grover’s simple chart trying to explain the areas (above):
…the practice has mostly moved outside rarified institutions and industries (the relationships were too complex and tied to capitalism and results-oriented economics), and into the hands of individuals and collectives (facilitated by networked communication which gave agency to maker culture, the open source movement, peer-to-peer sharing, crowdsourcing, etc.). From there, the types of activities exploded and yielded a variety of subtypes of Artists/Scientists/Technologists.
How would YOU make a map, diagram or chart of the many communities at the intersection of art, science, and technology?
“…an alliance is overdue, and can be achieved through the medium of interpretation. Neither science nor the arts can be complete without combining their separate strengths. Science needs the intuition and metaphorical power of the arts, and the arts need the fresh blood of science.”
E. O. Wilson, from “The Arts and their Interpretation” in Consilience.
I’m writing my master’s thesis on cultural institutions that foster the art, science, and technology nexus. The goal is to examine how institutional growth within this field has taken place in the United States compared to Europe as well as around the globe, and make recommendations for expansion in the US.
My research involves two survey elements:
1. If you work at an organization (arts- or science-based) that supports this field, please take this survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/R3BPVCV — there are 22 questions (10 multiple choice and 10 written response).
2. If you are an artist, scientist, or engineer that collaborates and creates work at this intersection, please take this survey: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/8XGC6GS — there are only 10 questions (one of which requires a typed answer).
All information will remain anonymous and used only for academic purposes.
It would be a HUGE help if you participated in the survey or forwarded it to a colleague. Thank you for your help! Let me know if you have any questions.
Regards, Whitney Dail MA Candidate, Arts Administration Savannah College of Art and Design
I’ve been working on a project with the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art in Charleston, SC - From the Moon: Mapping & Exploration, part one of a two-part NASA-sponsored exhibition and it opens this Saturday! For more information, visit moon.cofc.edu. Also, check out this article in The Post and Courier: Lunar Exploration: Art and Science Interact in C of C Exhibits, Moonfest.

The experience has been a dream come true! For one, I’ve had the pleasure of working directly with curator Mark Sloan and meeting many wonderful people such as scientists from the College of Charleston and South Carolina Space Grant Consortium like lunar expert Dr. Cass Runyon. This week, I’ve been working with Mark to create displays of rare, antique lunar maps, books, and illustrations at the Addlestone Library in the archives department.
Fun fact: Jules Verne predicted that we would travel to the moon from Florida.
I’ve learned a LOT in the process including the history of mankind’s fascination with mapping the Moon since Galileo and the various ways that artist-scientists have studied it. Each day I’ve been blown away by the the ways that people observed and illustrated the moon. Additionally, lunar visualizations have different styles depending on the observer. Some were drawn to look like microscopic organisms and others were modeled such as James Nasmyth’s below.

I can’t wait for the opening reception! Did I mention there’s a moon rock on view from where Apollo 15 landed at Hadley Rille of the Apennine Mountains? Apollo 15’s storyline is followed throughout the exhibit. There’s also a spacesuit glove, meteorites, and more. The exhibit is both artistic and scientific. In the gallery is a small theater room with a film collaboration by artist John Reynolds and composer Lee Donaldson. If you’re in Charleston, it’s a must-see.
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