Artscience: Creativity in the Post-Google Generation

David Edwards

Harvard University Press

Junctures, December 1st 2020

At a superficial level, scientists and artists can be depicted as polar opposites: left-brain, analytic thinkers versus right-brain, intuitive creators. Where scientists attempt to define the world objectively in terms of laws and proofs, artists are interested in the emotional truths that underpin our subjective experience of that world.

This is, of course, a massive oversimplification – albeit one that both sides may at times seek to accentuate. One need only think of such figures as Joseph Banks or Leonardo da Vinci to realise that art and science have a long and mutualistic relationship and that both are founded on a combination of method and result. Many early scientists relied upon artistic representation to document and present their work, while artists depicted and were informed by studies of science and medicine. The process continues today. New technology not only provides artists with fresh tools and means of expression, it also raises issues around which art can be created. Scientists use art to communicate their ideas (the Large Hadron Collider rap, for example) or to visualise scientific forms. These processes can, by and large, progress without any particular engagement between the two disciplines and, as such, could be regarded as exploitative, but there is also the possibility for deeper cross-disciplinary dialogue. This can be seen in fields such as bioethics and art preservation for example. However, there are still considerable barriers in the form of institutional and cultural practices that can stand in the way of art-science interaction.

David Edwards is a bioengineer and philanthropist who, with his wife, have founded Le Laoratoire, a centre for artistic and scientific collaboration in Paris. In ‘Artscience,’ he explains what inspired him and how the two disciplines can catalyse ‘creativity in the post-Google generation. Edwards’ basic thesis is that crossing the conventional lines between science and art (a process he calls ‘idea translation’) creates an environment in which innovation flourishes. To illustrate how this happens and why it is important, he provides examples of individuals who have successfully combined aesthetic and scientific methods to pioneer new territories in culture, social theory, industry and research.

What is common to all these stories is the need for the artist or scientist to understand or apply the methods of the other. The first example illustrates the transition from art to science (and back again). While working as a concert pianist, Diana Dabby read a series of articles written by engineers on future trends in music. Thinking she might be able to pioneer her art by better understanding the science, she returned to study electrical engineering at MIT. After struggling for years with the complexities of chaos theory, she saw a parallel between the patterns surrounding the theory of a mathematical ‘strange attractor’ and those of musical variation on a theme. By mapping notes onto the solutions to chaos equations, she provided not only a new way to view chaos but also a new composition technique. This work formed the basis of her doctoral thesis, and her musical interpretations are widely performed today.

The reverse transition occurred with Don Ingber. While studying biochemistry, he became fascinated by recurring natural structures like the helices in DNA and the geodesic shells of viruses. This led him to enrol in an architectural design course, where he learned about tensegrity structures. Realising that the way such structures responded to tensile stress was very similar to that of tissue cells, he hypothesised that such external structural changes might alter the cytoskeleton within the cells and, thus, their biochemistry. This idea of chemical-mechanical transduction (and his subsequent proof in the laboratory) was the foundation of cellular biomechanics. 

Both these stories can be seen as examples of idea translation in academia, but Edwards addresses similar innovations within industry, humanitarian organisations and cultural institutions. Finally, he describes how Le Laboratoire functions as both a space for collaboration between scientists and artists and as a exhibition and cultural centre where the public is invited to become involved with the projects underway.

As a scientist, ‘Artscience’ was not so much a revelation as an articulation and extension of my own thoughts on the relationship between science and creativity. Science progresses through a combination of intuitive understanding and methodical proof, while the emotional and psychological impact of an artwork is contingent upon the process by which it is created.

The balancing of scientific and creative energies as a way of enhancing one’s own life also falls under Edwards’ definition of Artscience, and many of my colleagues are as artistic outside the lab as they are professional within it. I suspect that fewer artists feel they have the ability or opportunity to engage with science; however, There is an implicit (and in some cases explicit) perception that people do art because they cannot succeed academically. Although there is now some academic recognition of artscience in New Zealand with the development of degree courses in bioethics and science communication, the movement is primarily from science to art rather than art to science. This is not to say that they do not occur, but collaborations of the sort that produced ‘Are Angels OK?’ are rare. This is where real possibilities may exist for establishing the kind of interaction space Le Laboratoire exemplifies. This book should also give artists the sense that they have something valuable to contribute to science and encourage them to look for opportunities to engage with the scientific community.

Edwards clearly intends his book to be aspirational and motivational, but his vision of artscience is, to a degree utopian. While celebrating the achievements of interdisciplinary interchange, he avoids some complicated and controversial issues. For example, what is (and is not) valid artscience? Edwards reluctantly admits that Damien Hirst’s preserved shark is a form of artscience insofar as it challenges us to consider the relationship between biological form and mortality, but Hirst himself is not an artscientist. He did not need to study biology or think about the physiological transitions between life and death in order to create his installation.

From that point of view, Hirst’s work appropriates from rather than engages in the scientific process and its classification as ‘artscience’ is thus questionable. On the other hand, the plastinations of the anatomist Gunther von Hagens quite clearly emerge from the intersection between art and science. Still, he openly concedes that his work is intended to entertain as much as inform. Contrast this with Paul Trotman’s recent documentary ‘Donated to Science’, which is as much about the ethics of dissection as it is about the process itself. Both leave lasting impressions and lead us to consider the relationships between the living and the dead, but von Hagens could regarded as manipulating artscience as a means of generating controversy and notoriety in a similar manner to Hirst, rather than inviting us to contemplate why his work is so shocking. Does this cross a line between art and exploitation? 

Although these and other questions (such as how an artist or scientist assesses knowledge from another discipline) need to be addressed, the idea of creating cross-disciplinary spaces is an exciting one. Insofar as the book is itself an example of artscience, it should catalyse new opportunities for artists and scientists to explore.

https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA250470963&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=abs&issn=11798912&p=AONE&sw=w&userGroupName=anon%7Ebfbc38cf

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